Katherine Murphy, DO Family Medicine Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 284 Pulaski Rd, Greenlawn, NY 11740 Phone: 631-425-5250 |
Dr. Anne E. Kieran, D.O. Family Medicine Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 284 Pulaski Rd, Greenlawn, NY 11740 Phone: 631-425-5250 |
Dr. Brenda Poykayil George, MD Family Medicine Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 284 Pulaski Rd, Dolan Family Health Center, Greenlawn, NY 11740 Phone: 631-425-5250 |
Dr. Saili Desai, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 284 Pulaski Rd, Greenlawn, NY 11740 Phone: 631-425-5250 Fax: 631-425-0140 |
Dr. Joan Marie Gonzalez, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5 Cuba Hill Rd, Greenlawn, NY 11740 Phone: 631-628-5000 |
News Archive
A new study by researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City could help orthopedic surgeons better identify which patients will benefit most from surgery to correct debilitating age-related deterioration of their foot arches.
A newly published study in the Lancet suggested that a first-line treatment regimen including Zometa (zoledronic acid) significantly improved overall survival and progression-free survival in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients compared with a regimen that included oral clodronate. The impact on survival was independent of the effect of Zometa on bone complications (also known as skeletal-related events or SREs).
Aetna today commended the U.S. Senate for taking action to significantly expand access to health care coverage for millions of Americans. While noting progress toward meaningful reform, Aetna Chairman and CEO Ronald A. Williams said that more needs to be done to deliver on the full promise of health care system reform.
Youth who are going to develop psychosis can be identified before their illness becomes full-blown 35 percent of the time if they meet widely accepted criteria for risk, but that figure rises to 65 to 80 percent if they have certain combinations of risk factors, the largest study of its kind has shown.
Researchers at The University of Western Ontario have discovered a strategy for stimulating the formation of highly functional new blood vessels in tissues that are starved of oxygen. Dr. Geoffrey Pickering and Matthew Frontini at the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry developed a strategy in which a biological factor, called fibroblast growth factor 9, is delivered at the same time that the body is making its own effort at forming new blood vessels in vulnerable or damaged tissue.
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