Andrey Iimants Blumberg, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3141 Kline Dr, Virginia Beach, VA 23452 Phone: 757-431-2781 |
Dr. Curtis Wesley Gaball, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4560 Church Point Pl, Virginia Beach, VA 23455 Phone: 757-464-1761 |
Dr. Denton Dean Weiss, MD Otolaryngology - Plastic Surgery within the Head & Neck Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 272 Bendix Rd, Suite 100, Virginia Beach, VA 23452 Phone: 757-490-7545 Fax: 757-490-7549 |
Kyle Seung Choe, MD Otolaryngology - Facial Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4400 Corporation Ln, Suite #102, Virginia Beach, VA 23462 Phone: 757-389-5850 Fax: 757-499-3745 |
Bill Wayne Berry Jr., M.D. Otolaryngology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1950 Glenn Mitchell Dr, Suite 310, Virginia Beach, VA 23456 Phone: 757-507-0340 Fax: 757-507-0341 |
Mr. William Swain Teachey, MD Otolaryngology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1020 Independence Blvd, Suite 313, Virginia Beach, VA 23455 Phone: 757-464-9165 Fax: 757-464-4478 |
News Archive
The drug varenicline shows effectiveness in helping smokers quit and abstain from smoking when compared to placebo and the smoking cessation medication bupropion.
The use of urate lowering therapy might successfully prevent death from cardiovascular disease in people with gout, according to research presented at the Nov 2010, American College of Rheumatology Annual Scientific Meeting in Atlanta.
Scientists have uncovered the flu's secret formula for effectively evolving within and between host species: balance. The key lies with the flu's unique replication process, which has evolved to produce enough mutations for the virus to spread and adapt to its host environment, but not so many that unwanted genomic mutations lead to the flu's demise (catastrophic mutagenesis).
A recent case report in the Annals of Emergency Medicine revealed the potential risk of serious burns and electrocution with the use of generic phone chargers compared to branded ones, as shown by several analyses.
What happens when the families of sick and dying hospitalized children ask their physicians to pray with them, or for them? How do pediatricians respond to such personal requests? While increasing numbers of physicians say that religion and spirituality help some patients and families cope with serious illness, a new study reports that it is almost always the families and patients who raise the issue of prayer, not the doctors themselves.
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