Dr. Catherine Booth Heilman, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-812-4900 Fax: 717-255-0951 |
Stephanie Jane Ellwood, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-812-4900 Fax: 717-255-0951 |
Dr. Wynne Ann Hoffacker, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-846-4644 Fax: 717-259-7262 |
Dr. Rachel Benelli Markey, Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-812-4900 Fax: 717-255-0951 |
Dr. Michael A Zittle, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 312 Harrisburg St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-259-0222 Fax: 717-259-6348 |
Dr. Michael Eugene Brown, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-846-4644 Fax: 717-259-7262 |
Annie Melinda Harberger, D.O. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-812-4900 Fax: 717-255-0951 |
Lauren Michelle Cashman, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-812-4900 Fax: 717-255-0951 |
News Archive
Although up to 20 percent of adolescents experience a depressive episode each year, the medical community has struggled to implement programs that effectively prevent depression.
Next week the city of Philadelphia will host the 52nd annual meeting of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM), the premier organization in medical physics, a broadly-based scientific and professional discipline encompassing physics principles and applications in medicine and biology.
A discovery by Babraham scientists brings new insight into how cells are reprogrammed and a greater understanding of how the environment, or factors like nutritional signals, can interact with our genes to affect health. As an embryo develops, cells acquire a particular fate, for example becoming a nerve or skin cell. The findings, reported online in the journal Nature, pinpoint a protein called AID as being important for complete cellular reprogramming in mammals.
Researchers at Michigan State University have shown a prebiotic may help the body's own natural killer cells fight bacterial infection and reduce inflammation, greatly decreasing the risk of colon cancer.
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