Dr. Rakesh Kumar, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 123 Sparta Hwy, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 706-485-2621 Fax: 706-485-9354 |
Dr. Ronald Huet, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 101 Lake Oconee Pkwy, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 904-805-1300 Fax: 904-805-1302 |
Dr. Kimberly Young Phillips, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 142 Hospital Perimeter Rd, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 706-485-1145 Fax: 706-485-6025 |
Dr. Diana Cafaro Homeier, M.D. Family Medicine - Geriatric Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 117 Harmony Xing Ste 1, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 762-320-2100 |
Angela Lauranne Seawright, Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 112 Harmony Xing Ste 1, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 762-214-5615 |
James E Southerland, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 114 Harmony Xing Ste 1, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 706-484-0884 Fax: 706-484-0885 |
Susan Leigh Jones, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 952 Lake Oconee Pkwy, Eatonton, GA 31024 Phone: 706-485-0880 Fax: 706-485-0846 |
News Archive
NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, LLC., a wholly owned subsidiary of Quality Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:QSII) and a leading provider of healthcare information systems and connectivity solutions, announced today it is a recipient of the Surescripts White Coat of Quality Award, marking its third time earning this prestigious honor.
A group of health care organizations are joining forces to compile evidence on the strategies the work best to address a variety of common, and usually expensive, medical conditions. Meanwhile, the nation's new Medicare chief is hitting the road to hear ideas about improving the health care system.
No other industry is as thoroughly regulated as the pharmaceutical industry. The active ingredients are legion and so are the standards to test for them.
Rats use a sense that humans don't: whisking. They move their facial whiskers back and forth about eight times a second to locate objects in their environment. Could humans acquire this sense? And if they can, what could understanding the process of adapting to new sensory input tell us about how humans normally sense? At the Weizmann Institute, researchers explored these questions by attaching plastic "whiskers" to the fingers of blindfolded volunteers and asking them to carry out a location task.
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