Dale Leonard Messer, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 711 W Sidnor St, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 281-331-5953 Fax: 281-331-2221 |
Kymberly N Butler, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1111 W Adoue St, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 281-824-1480 Fax: 281-220-6407 |
Joseph Cornell Dewitt, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 109 E Timberlane Dr, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 281-331-5153 |
Robert Berman, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 400 Medic Lane, Suite A, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 281-331-9241 Fax: 281-331-2745 |
Dr. Kerry D Mccarroll, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 400 Medic Ln Ste C, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 281-331-0082 Fax: 281-331-2624 |
Dr. Antonia Luisa Way, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1111 W Adoue St, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 281-824-1480 Fax: 281-220-6407 |
Mrs. Shakira Dhamotharan, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2020 E Highway 6, Alvin, TX 77511 Phone: 973-754-4100 |
News Archive
News outlets report on aspects of the health law designed to foster and test innovation in the nation's health care delivery system.
Scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute have been awarded just over $1 million from the National Institutes of Health for a three-year study to develop new high-throughput screening tests to find compounds that disable a protein essential to hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication.
Shire plc today announced that Natpara (parathyroid hormone) for injection is now available in the United States. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Natpara as an adjunct to calcium and vitamin D to control hypocalcemia in patients with hypoparathyroidism on January 23, 2015.
A new "fertility first" hypothesis published this week by a group of international experts in the American Journal of Human Biology, proposes that the global epidemic of Type 2 diabetes has its origins in the struggle, over millennia, to sustain human fertility in environments defined by famine.
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