Dr. Usha A Bhargave, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 10058 S Mountain Rd, South Mountain, PA 17261 Phone: 717-749-3121 |
Dr. Brett W Goglin, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10058 S Mountain Rd, South Mountain, PA 17261 Phone: 717-749-3121 |
Dr. Ann M Shemo, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10058 S Mountain Rd, South Mountain, PA 17261 Phone: 717-749-4002 Fax: 717-749-4071 |
Dr. Martin Hudzinski, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 10058 S Mountain Rd, South Mountain, PA 17261 Phone: 717-749-3121 Fax: 717-749-4071 |
News Archive
Ultra-tiny zinc oxide (ZnO) particles with dimensions less than one-ten-millionth of a meter are among the ingredients list of some commercially available sunscreen products, raising concerns about whether the particles may be absorbed beneath the outer layer of skin.
A team of Washington State University scientists has devised a method that could lead to the development of vaccines against some of the most troubling infectious diseases we face diseases that have so far been difficult or impossible to vaccinate against.
Clients of NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, Inc. have secured nearly $2 million in reimbursements from the Physician Quality Reporting Initiative program by leveraging NextGen Ambulatory EHR and the NextGen Health Quality Measures Reporting Module, a proprietary, clinical data repository designed for automated registry reporting of clinical outcomes and quality measure data for pay-for-performance programs.
The bombs at the Boston Marathon were designed to maim and kill, and they did. Three people died within the first moments of the blast. More than a hundred and seventy people were injured. They had their limbs blown off, vital arteries severed, bones fractured, flesh torn open by shrapnel or scorched by the blasts' heat. Yet it now appears that every one of the wounded alive when rescuers reached them will survive.
A new study published in the current issue of Psychotherapy and Psychosmatics has examined brain activity after a heart attack.This study provides the first evidence that persistent depressive symptoms after acute coronary syndrome are associated with vascular brain changes.
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