Jeffery Ray Mcgee, PA-C, AA-C - Medicare Anesthesiology Assistant in Stockbridge, GA

Jeffery Ray Mcgee, PA-C, AA-C is a medicare enrolled "Anesthesiologist Assistant" physician in Stockbridge, Georgia. He graduated from medical school in 1999 and has 25 years of diverse experience with area of expertise as Anesthesiology Assistant. He is a member of the group practice Ssm Health Slu Hospital Anesthesia Physician Billing Llc and his current practice location is 1740 Hudson Bridge Rd, Suite 1218, Stockbridge, Georgia. You can reach out to his office (for appointments etc.) via phone at (678) 604-1053.

Jeffery Ray Mcgee is licensed to practice in Missouri (license number 2015027076) and he also participates in the medicare program. He accepts medicare assignments (which means he accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance) and his NPI Number is 1417956665.

Contact Information

Jeffery Ray Mcgee, PA-C, AA-C
1740 Hudson Bridge Rd, Suite 1218,
Stockbridge, GA 30281-6331
(678) 604-1053
Not Available



Physician's Profile

Full NameJeffery Ray Mcgee
GenderMale
SpecialityAnesthesiology Assistant
Experience25 Years
Location1740 Hudson Bridge Rd, Stockbridge, Georgia
Accepts Medicare AssignmentsYes. He accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance.
  Medical Education and Training:
  • Jeffery Ray Mcgee graduated from medical school in 1999
  NPI Data:
  • NPI Number: 1417956665
  • Provider Enumeration Date: 07/19/2005
  • Last Update Date: 03/29/2022
  Medicare PECOS Information:
  • PECOS PAC ID: 9032014675
  • Enrollment ID: I20160330001380

Medical Identifiers

Medical identifiers for Jeffery Ray Mcgee such as npi, medicare ID, medicare PIN, medicaid, etc.
IdentifierTypeStateIssuer
1417956665NPI-NPPES

Medical Taxonomies and Licenses

TaxonomyTypeLicense (State)Status
207P00000XEmergency Medicine 085-001337 (Illinois)Secondary
363AS0400XPhysician Assistant - Surgical 085-001337 (Illinois)Secondary
367H00000XAnesthesiologist Assistant 6511 (Georgia)Secondary
367H00000XAnesthesiologist Assistant 2015027076 (Missouri)Primary

Medical Facilities Affiliation

Facility NameLocationFacility Type
St Louis University HospitalSaint louis, MOHospital

Group Practice Association

Group Practice NameGroup PECOS PAC IDNo. of Members
Ssm Health Slu Hospital Anesthesia Physician Billing Llc327484233177

News Archive

First Edition: December 18, 2009

The highlights from today's headlines focus on continuing movement in the Senate toward a pre-Christmas health overhaul vote - but many questions about its cost, and how many votes it can attract, persist.

Researchers develop a method to detect SARS-CoV-2 and variants simultaneously

Researchers demonstrate a method of detecting the presence and mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 virus using the smaller and cheaper Oxford Nanopore sequencer, a method they believe could make pandemic surveillance faster and cheaper.

Investigational drug reduces stuttering symptoms in open-label pilot study

A team led by a psychiatrist at the University of California, Riverside, has tested the orally administered investigational medication ecopipam on adults who stutter in an open-label, uncontrolled clinical trial and found that it reduced their stuttering symptoms from the start of therapy after eight weeks of dosing.

Children who spend more time outdoors have less nearsightedness

At night Lisa Ostrin's lab at the University of Houston College of Optometry often looks like the setting of a disco slumber party, a place where a child, aged 7 to 14, accompanied by a guardian, sleeps over and is periodically exposed to blue or red lights.

New CMR imaging technique increases accuracy by eliminating patients' need to breathe naturally

A new technique for cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging improves accuracy by removing patients' need to breathe, reveals research presented today at EuroCMR 2016 by Professor Juerg Schwitter, director of the Cardiac MR Centre at the University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland.

Read more Medical News

› Verified 5 days ago

Medicare Reassignments

Some practitioners may not bill the customers directly but medicare billing happens through clinics / group practice / hospitals where the provider works. Medicare reassignment of benefits is a mechanism by which practitioners allow third parties to bill and receive payment for medicare services performed by them. Jeffery Ray Mcgee allows following entities to bill medicare on his behalf.
Entity NameSsm Health Slu Hospital Anesthesia Physician Billing Llc
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1407232804
PECOS PAC ID: 3274842331
Enrollment ID: O20151013000437

News Archive

First Edition: December 18, 2009

The highlights from today's headlines focus on continuing movement in the Senate toward a pre-Christmas health overhaul vote - but many questions about its cost, and how many votes it can attract, persist.

Researchers develop a method to detect SARS-CoV-2 and variants simultaneously

Researchers demonstrate a method of detecting the presence and mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 virus using the smaller and cheaper Oxford Nanopore sequencer, a method they believe could make pandemic surveillance faster and cheaper.

Investigational drug reduces stuttering symptoms in open-label pilot study

A team led by a psychiatrist at the University of California, Riverside, has tested the orally administered investigational medication ecopipam on adults who stutter in an open-label, uncontrolled clinical trial and found that it reduced their stuttering symptoms from the start of therapy after eight weeks of dosing.

Children who spend more time outdoors have less nearsightedness

At night Lisa Ostrin's lab at the University of Houston College of Optometry often looks like the setting of a disco slumber party, a place where a child, aged 7 to 14, accompanied by a guardian, sleeps over and is periodically exposed to blue or red lights.

New CMR imaging technique increases accuracy by eliminating patients' need to breathe naturally

A new technique for cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging improves accuracy by removing patients' need to breathe, reveals research presented today at EuroCMR 2016 by Professor Juerg Schwitter, director of the Cardiac MR Centre at the University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland.

Read more Medical News

› Verified 5 days ago

Entity NameMidwest Anesthesia Providers Sc
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1295189082
PECOS PAC ID: 9830480581
Enrollment ID: O20160712001846

News Archive

First Edition: December 18, 2009

The highlights from today's headlines focus on continuing movement in the Senate toward a pre-Christmas health overhaul vote - but many questions about its cost, and how many votes it can attract, persist.

Researchers develop a method to detect SARS-CoV-2 and variants simultaneously

Researchers demonstrate a method of detecting the presence and mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 virus using the smaller and cheaper Oxford Nanopore sequencer, a method they believe could make pandemic surveillance faster and cheaper.

Investigational drug reduces stuttering symptoms in open-label pilot study

A team led by a psychiatrist at the University of California, Riverside, has tested the orally administered investigational medication ecopipam on adults who stutter in an open-label, uncontrolled clinical trial and found that it reduced their stuttering symptoms from the start of therapy after eight weeks of dosing.

Children who spend more time outdoors have less nearsightedness

At night Lisa Ostrin's lab at the University of Houston College of Optometry often looks like the setting of a disco slumber party, a place where a child, aged 7 to 14, accompanied by a guardian, sleeps over and is periodically exposed to blue or red lights.

New CMR imaging technique increases accuracy by eliminating patients' need to breathe naturally

A new technique for cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging improves accuracy by removing patients' need to breathe, reveals research presented today at EuroCMR 2016 by Professor Juerg Schwitter, director of the Cardiac MR Centre at the University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland.

Read more Medical News

› Verified 5 days ago

Entity NameMidwest Anesthesia Associates Pc
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1558719617
PECOS PAC ID: 8921387390
Enrollment ID: O20161108001839

News Archive

First Edition: December 18, 2009

The highlights from today's headlines focus on continuing movement in the Senate toward a pre-Christmas health overhaul vote - but many questions about its cost, and how many votes it can attract, persist.

Researchers develop a method to detect SARS-CoV-2 and variants simultaneously

Researchers demonstrate a method of detecting the presence and mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 virus using the smaller and cheaper Oxford Nanopore sequencer, a method they believe could make pandemic surveillance faster and cheaper.

Investigational drug reduces stuttering symptoms in open-label pilot study

A team led by a psychiatrist at the University of California, Riverside, has tested the orally administered investigational medication ecopipam on adults who stutter in an open-label, uncontrolled clinical trial and found that it reduced their stuttering symptoms from the start of therapy after eight weeks of dosing.

Children who spend more time outdoors have less nearsightedness

At night Lisa Ostrin's lab at the University of Houston College of Optometry often looks like the setting of a disco slumber party, a place where a child, aged 7 to 14, accompanied by a guardian, sleeps over and is periodically exposed to blue or red lights.

New CMR imaging technique increases accuracy by eliminating patients' need to breathe naturally

A new technique for cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging improves accuracy by removing patients' need to breathe, reveals research presented today at EuroCMR 2016 by Professor Juerg Schwitter, director of the Cardiac MR Centre at the University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland.

Read more Medical News

› Verified 5 days ago

Medicare Part D Prescriber Enrollment

Any physician or other eligible professional who prescribes Part D drugs must either enroll in the Medicare program or opt out in order to prescribe drugs to their patients with Part D prescription drug benefit plans. Jeffery Ray Mcgee is enrolled with medicare and thus, if eligible, can prescribe medicare part D drugs to patients with medicare part D benefits.

Mailing Address and Practice Location

Mailing AddressPractice Location Address
Jeffery Ray Mcgee, PA-C, AA-C
1740 Hudson Bridge Rd, Suite 1218,
Stockbridge, GA 30281-6331

Ph: (678) 604-1053
Jeffery Ray Mcgee, PA-C, AA-C
1740 Hudson Bridge Rd, Suite 1218,
Stockbridge, GA 30281-6331

Ph: (678) 604-1053

News Archive

First Edition: December 18, 2009

The highlights from today's headlines focus on continuing movement in the Senate toward a pre-Christmas health overhaul vote - but many questions about its cost, and how many votes it can attract, persist.

Researchers develop a method to detect SARS-CoV-2 and variants simultaneously

Researchers demonstrate a method of detecting the presence and mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 virus using the smaller and cheaper Oxford Nanopore sequencer, a method they believe could make pandemic surveillance faster and cheaper.

Investigational drug reduces stuttering symptoms in open-label pilot study

A team led by a psychiatrist at the University of California, Riverside, has tested the orally administered investigational medication ecopipam on adults who stutter in an open-label, uncontrolled clinical trial and found that it reduced their stuttering symptoms from the start of therapy after eight weeks of dosing.

Children who spend more time outdoors have less nearsightedness

At night Lisa Ostrin's lab at the University of Houston College of Optometry often looks like the setting of a disco slumber party, a place where a child, aged 7 to 14, accompanied by a guardian, sleeps over and is periodically exposed to blue or red lights.

New CMR imaging technique increases accuracy by eliminating patients' need to breathe naturally

A new technique for cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging improves accuracy by removing patients' need to breathe, reveals research presented today at EuroCMR 2016 by Professor Juerg Schwitter, director of the Cardiac MR Centre at the University Hospital Lausanne, Switzerland.

Read more News

› Verified 5 days ago



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