Douglas D Stern, DO Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 214 Peach Orchard Rd, Mc Connellsburg, PA 17233 Phone: 717-485-3155 Fax: 717-485-6124 |
Dr. Gerald T Celestine, MD Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 214 Peach Orchard Rd, Mc Connellsburg, PA 17233 Phone: 717-485-3155 Fax: 717-485-6124 |
James Neil Rintoul, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 214 Peach Orchard Rd, Mc Connellsburg, PA 17233 Phone: 717-485-3155 Fax: 717-485-6133 |
Albert Keiyu Iguchi, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 214 Peach Orchard Rd, Mc Connellsburg, PA 17233 Phone: 717-485-3155 Fax: 717-485-6133 |
Ryan Joseph Mcfague, DO Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 214 Peach Orchard Rd, Mc Connellsburg, PA 17233 Phone: 717-485-3155 |
Gregory Franko, PA-C Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 214 Peach Orchard Rd, Mc Connellsburg, PA 17233 Phone: 717-485-3155 |
News Archive
Historically, half or more of people with type 1 diabetes develop kidney disease, which frequently progresses to kidney failure requiring hemodialysis or a kidney transplant for survival.
A loving touch, characterized by a slow caress or stroke - often an instinctive gesture from a mother to a child or between partners in romantic relationships - may increase the brain's ability to construct a sense of body ownership and, in turn, play a part in creating and sustaining a healthy sense of self.
The American Academy of Pain Medicine announced today that its Immediate Past President Sean Mackey, MD, PhD, was awarded the highly prestigious National Institutes of Health Director's Award in recognition of his leadership role on the National Pain Strategy.
A research collaboration between Mississippi State University and Cardiff University in the United Kingdom aims to increase understanding of infant head trauma.
Our ability to pay attention to certain things while ignoring distractions determines how good we are at a given task, whether it is driving a car or doing brain surgery. A research team at McGill University has for the first time convincingly identified a network of neurons in a particular area of the brain, the lateral prefrontal cortex, that interact with one another to promptly filter visual information while at the same time ignoring distractions. It's a discovery with potentially far reaching implications for people who suffer from diseases such as autism, ADHD and schizophrenia.
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