Dr. Robert Jason Howe, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 118 Portsmouth Ave Bldg D, Stratham, NH 03885 Phone: 603-778-1620 Fax: 603-772-8015 |
Dr. Doris D Cromer, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 8 Aspen Ln, Stratham, NH 03885 Phone: 603-997-6466 |
Monica Michelle Gifford, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 118 Portsmouth Ave Bldg D, Stratham, NH 03885 Phone: 603-778-1620 Fax: 603-772-8015 |
Dr. Timothy G Keenan, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 118 Portsmouth Ave Bldg D, Stratham, NH 03885 Phone: 603-778-1620 Fax: 603-772-8015 |
Mrs. Joanna A Luchsinger, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 118 Portsmouth Ave Bldg D, Stratham, NH 03885 Phone: 603-778-1620 Fax: 603-772-8015 |
Monique Larouche, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 118 Portsmouth Ave Bldg D, Stratham, NH 03885 Phone: 603-778-1620 Fax: 603-772-8015 |
News Archive
For patients with advanced lung cancer, a non-invasive liquid biopsy may be a more effective and suitable alternative to the gold standard tissue biopsy to detect clinically relevant mutations and help guide their course of treatment, suggests a new study published this week in the journal Clinical Cancer Research from researchers at the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania.
A new method allows surgeons to reconstruct entire heart valves from the patient's own tissue. This surgical procedure is currently only used at a handful of centers in the world.
Around 10.8 million children die worldwide each year. Credible global and national estimates of the burden of disease in childhood are essential for the development of appropriate health policy and implementation of health interventions to prevent these deaths.
New data released today by Quest Diagnostics Incorporated, the nation's leading provider of employment-related drug testing services, reveal that drug testing of hair specimens from employees and job applicants in the general U.S. workforce has tracked sharp downward trends in cocaine and methamphetamine use from 2005 to the first half of 2009 that mirror similar drops shown by urine testing.
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