Michael Stanley Niziol, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 83 Lewis Street, Dryden, NY 13053 Phone: 607-844-8201 Fax: 607-231-4216 |
William A Klepack, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5 Evergreen Street, Dryden, NY 13053 Phone: 607-844-5251 Fax: 607-844-4288 |
Cindy Gordon, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 5 Evergreen Street, Dryden, NY 13053 Phone: 607-844-5251 Fax: 607-844-4288 |
Howard Silcoff, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5 Evergreen Street, Dryden, NY 13053 Phone: 607-844-5251 Fax: 607-844-4288 |
Mary F Howson, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5 Evergeen Street, Dryden, NY 13053 Phone: 607-844-5251 Fax: 607-844-4288 |
News Archive
Our cells live ever on the verge of suicide, requiring the close attention of a team of molecules to prevent the cells from pulling the trigger. This self-destructive tendency can be a very good thing, as when dangerous precancerous cells are permitted to kill themselves, but it can also go horribly wrong, destroying brain cells that store memories, for instance. Rockefeller University scientists are parsing this perilous arrangement in ever finer detail in hopes that understanding the basic mechanisms of programmed cell death, or apoptosis, will enable them eventually to manipulate the process to kill the cells we want to kill and protect the ones we don't.
Solos Endoscopy, Inc. is pleased to announce that the Company looks forward to a prosperous 2010, following a solid year in 2009, due in great part to its MammoView(TM) instrument line.
CollegeAIM, a new resource to help college officials address harmful and underage student drinking, is now available. The CollegeAIM (Alcohol Intervention Matrix) guide and website was developed by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, part of the National Institutes of Health.
Numerous studies have suggested that job loss and unemployment lead to poorer health. Sociologists at the University of Bamberg are now continuing this research and have set out to answer whether job loss still has health-related consequences even if it occurred decades ago and subsequent employment may have been found.
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