Nicholas W Phillips Iii, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 730 Main St, Millis, MA 02054 Phone: 508-376-2515 Fax: 508-376-9932 |
Kathryn R Ellis, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 730 Main St, 1a, Millis, MA 02054 Phone: 508-376-2515 Fax: 508-376-9932 |
Steven L. Bornstein, D.O. Family Medicine - Adult Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 969 Main St, Millis, MA 02054 Phone: 508-376-1125 Fax: 508-376-1102 |
News Archive
Academics are to look at ways to encourage Scots to take part in a new national screening programme for bowel cancer, a leading cause of cancer deaths in Western nations.
The Global Health Network has released a new paper titled "Common Toxins in our Homes, Schools and Workplaces." According to an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) spokesman, indoor air pollution causes 50% of illnesses globally. This statistic should catch the attention of every physician, every lawmaker and every layperson reading this paper. That's more than all the cancers and all the heart disease combined. It is time we started to pay more attention to the indoor air we breathe. It is staggering to comprehend the enormous impact on our global society as literally millions of individuals and families are harmed by contaminants inside our homes, schools and workplaces.
At today's Annual Shareholders' Meeting of the Sartorius technology group, CEO and Executive Board Chairman Dr. Joachim Kreuzburg presented the consolidated results for the first three months of 2010. The Biotechnology Division, which operates under the name Sartorius Stedim Biotech and contributes a good two-thirds to consolidated sales, started off the year 2010 by reporting growth and further profitability gains again.
According to a study published online in The FASEB Journal, involving mice, gestational exposure to airborne particles derived from diesel exhaust can modify DNA in utero and alter the expression of genes that potentially increase susceptibility to adult heart failure.
NewScientist reports on the U.S. National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity's (NSABB) recommendation that revised versions of two controversial studies on H5N1 avian flu be published in scientific journals, reversing its previous recommendation that the studies only be published if certain details were withheld. According to the news service, dissent among the board members over the issue has prompted the committee to "propose talks to draft global guidelines for doing and communicating work involving dangerous pathogens."
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