Dr. James Kenneth Dziadziola, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 645 Amalia St Ne, Concord, NC 28025 Phone: 704-295-3255 |
Nicholas Stowell, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 645 Amalia St Ne, Concord, NC 28025 Phone: 704-295-3255 Fax: 704-295-3279 |
Dr. Robert Patel Quinn, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 25 Lake Concord Rd Ne, Concord, NC 28025 Phone: 704-782-6673 Fax: 704-782-6605 |
Dr. Robert Clayton Jarchow, MEDICAL DOCTOR Otolaryngology - Facial Plastic Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1018 Lee Ann Dr Ne, Concord, NC 28025 Phone: 704-782-7111 Fax: 704-782-7139 |
Dr. Jamie Rebecca Scaglione, M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 645 Amalia St Ne, Concord, NC 28025 Phone: 704-295-3255 |
Francis P. J. Langford, M.D. Otolaryngology - Facial Plastic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 645 Amalia St Ne, Concord, NC 28025 Phone: 704-295-3255 Fax: 704-295-3279 |
News Archive
​Nearly 80 percent of trauma centers in the United States that serve predominantly minority patients have higher-than-expected death rates, according to new Johns Hopkins research.
States often find the cost of defending new abortion limits in court can run in the millions. In the meantime, Calif. lawmakers have passed a bill that would allow some nurses to perform certain abortions.
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated announced that it has completed the submission of a New Drug Application (NDA) to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) seeking approval for telaprevir, Vertex's investigational treatment for people with hepatitis C.
A detailed study of the monoclonal antibodies from a person who survived a Marburg infection led researchers to identify novel mechanisms that contribute protection against the disease, according to the latest findings of a collaborative team led by The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston and Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Intermittent exotropia, a condition in which the eyes turn outward while looking at an object, occurs in about 1% of American children and is less common than esotropia, where the eyes turn inward. In an article published in the March 2010 issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology, researchers from the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, MN, followed 135 patients with intermittent exotropia over a 20-year period and found that slightly more than 90% of these children became nearsighted by the time they reached their 20s.
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