Dr. Joseph Anthony Sciarrino, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4150 Deputy Bill Cantrell Memorial Road, Suite 260, Cumming, GA 30040 Phone: 770-292-3045 Fax: 770-292-3045 |
Dr. Hafiah Eltahir, DO Otolaryngology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4150 Deputy Bill Cantrell Memorial Road #260, Cumming, GA 30040 Phone: 770-292-3045 |
Dr. Natalie Vercillo Sciarrino, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4150 Deputy Bill Cantrell Memorial Road, Suite 260, Cumming, GA 30040 Phone: 770-292-3045 Fax: 770-292-3046 |
News Archive
Data presented at the 73rd Annual Scientific Meeting of the American College of Rheumatology highlight effects of baseline characteristics on achievement of serum uric acid (sUA) levels to <6.0 mg/dL and the frequency of flares with ULORIC- (febuxostat) treatment.
Adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) is a gene whose mutations are associated with a rare, hereditary form of colorectal cancer known as familial adenomatous polyposis. Research led by scientists at the Institut Pasteur and Inserm have recently demonstrated that mutations to this gene do not only lead to the emergence of colon polyps; they also harm the immune system, leaving it unable to tackle inflammation of the colonic mucosa.
Efforts to correct false beliefs about health care reform may backfire, depending on individuals' political views and level of knowledge, suggests a study in the February issue of Medical Care.
It seemed like a watershed moment for the Affordable Care Act when Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R), a staunch Obamacare opponent, embraced the Medicaid expansion in February. ... Scott wouldn't be the one to "deny Floridians" a part of the health care law-;but the Florida legislature had other plans.
"[W]e are losing the global fight against bad medicines," and though "[s]ome progress is being made," the "problem is that ... crackdowns tend to focus on counterfeit drugs" while a "much bigger public health problem ... is substandard drugs that are the result of shoddy manufacturing and handling - or perhaps worse, deliberate corner-cutting," Roger Bate, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, writes in an opinion piece in The Hill's "Congress Blog."
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