Dr. Edwin D. Meeks Ii, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2403 5th St N, Columbus, MS 39705 Phone: 662-327-0901 Fax: 662-327-0907 |
Dr. Justin M. Garner, M.D. Otolaryngology - Otolaryngic Allergy Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2430 5th St N, Columbus, MS 39705 Phone: 662-327-4432 |
Dr. Steven Paul Smith, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2430 5th St N, Columbus, MS 39705 Phone: 662-327-4432 |
Walter N Cosby, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2430 5th St N, Columbus, MS 39705 Phone: 662-327-4432 Fax: 662-327-9256 |
Dr. Robert C. Borden, M.D. Otolaryngology - Otolaryngic Allergy Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2430 5th St N, Columbus, MS 39705 Phone: 662-327-4432 |
Joseph S Boggess, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2430 5th St N, Columbus, MS 39705 Phone: 662-327-4432 Fax: 662-327-9256 |
News Archive
India has been warned by the director of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and a senior official of the UN that it is on the brink of an AIDS catastrophe.
New research from University of the Sciences' Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy suggests that MammaPrint - a gene expression profiling (GEP) test used to identify whether women with early-stage breast cancer would benefit from chemotherapy - is the more cost-effective and clinically-useful test than the most frequently used GEP in practice in the United States today.
Power3 Medical Products, Inc. announced that four abstracts were accepted for presentation to the annual meeting of the International Congress of Alzheimer's Disease on July 12, 2010 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The presentations will cover results from protein biomarker discovery, drug response, test development, and ongoing clinical validation trials of the NuroPro AD biomarkers and blood test for Alzheimer's disease.
Want to know how healthy your heart is? Now there's an app for that. In a proof-of-concept clinical trial, engineers at Caltech, Huntington Medical Research Institute, and USC have demonstrated that the camera on your smartphone can noninvasively provide detailed information about your heart's health.
One man's trash is another man's treasure, as the saying goes. If things go to plan, feces from registered and thoroughly tested healthy donors will in a few years be the standard treatment for the bacterium Clostridium difficile at Danish hospitals.
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