Dr. Elizabeth A Bradley, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 857 Montgomery Ave, Penn Valley, PA 19072 Phone: 610-664-2951 Fax: 610-664-2131 |
Dr. Stephanie A Mcknight, M.D. Family Medicine - Bariatric Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 915 Montgomery Ave Fl 4, Penn Valley, PA 19072 Phone: 610-668-7992 Fax: 610-668-7991 |
Binyamin Rothstein, Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 954 Montgomery Ave, Penn Valley, PA 19072 Phone: 484-542-6681 |
Michael B Rosen, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 857 Montgomery Ave Fl 1, Penn Valley, PA 19072 Phone: 601-664-2951 |
News Archive
"According to analysis led by Kanika Bahl and Pooja Shaw of Results for Development's (R4D's) Market Dynamics team, improved global incentives and information on cost-effectiveness could save the fight against malaria up to $630 million over the next five years and encourage manufacturers to produce better-performing nets," Bahl, a managing director for R4D, and Shaw, a program officer in the Market Dynamics Practice at R4D, write in the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's "Impatient Optimists" blog.
Universal Capital Management, Inc. (OTCBB: UCMT), a Wilmington, Delaware business development company that provides management and strategic growth resources to emerging growth companies, is pleased to announce the addition of Innovation Industries to its portfolio.
Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a leader in the development of therapeutic and preventive vaccines against cancers and infectious diseases, announced today that Scientific American magazine has published in its July issue an article entitled "DNA Drugs Come of Age." The article was co-authored by Dr. David Weiner, Chairman, Scientific Advisory Board, Inovio Pharmaceuticals, and Professor, Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, at the University of Pennsylvania and Dr. Matthew Morrow, a post-doctorate research fellow at University of Pennsylvania.
In a scientific breakthrough, five boys who were unable to urinate due to pelvic injury were cured for up to six years after getting new lab-grown urethras or urinary tubes that connect with the bladder. This breakthrough comes from Wake Forest University researcher Anthony Atala. It was in 2006 that the team reported the first successful implantation of lab-grown urinary bladders into humans. Today six years after the operation all of the boys continue to do well, with normal or near-normal urinary flow. The boy first treated is now 16 years old and received his lab-grown urethra over six years ago.
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