Dr. Tehmina Sami, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 13440 University Blvd Ste 180, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-994-7911 Fax: 281-994-7921 |
Tony V Tran, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 17500 W Grand Pkwy S, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-725-5000 |
Hina Momin, NP Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 16605 Southwest Fwy, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-302-5673 |
Ann Marie Heikkinen, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 16902 Southwest Fwy, Ste 100, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-565-2800 Fax: 281-565-2801 |
David Anthony Braunreiter, M.D Family Medicine - Sports Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 16811 Southwest Fwy, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-690-4678 |
Daniel A. Nwachokor, MD, MPH Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 17510 W Grand Pkwy S Ste 380, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 346-616-0038 |
Dr. Asisat Abiola Ope, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 16605 Southwest Fwy Ste 400, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-275-0800 |
Sasha M Fray, FNP Family Medicine - Adult Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7616 Branford Pl Ste 140, Sugar Land, TX 77479 Phone: 281-888-8999 Fax: 281-305-4054 |
News Archive
Close2U, an electronic device application, has been developed by researchers at the Complutense University (UCM) and the University of Zaragoza (UZA) to monitor cancer patients' physical and mental health using gamification.
Researchers in Hamilton have discovered that a blood-thinning drug, dabigatran, significantly reduces the risk of death, heart attack, stroke, and other heart or blood-vessel complications in patients who have a heart injury following major, non-cardiac surgery.
Misinformation and misunderstanding about the risks associated with ionizing radiation create heightened public concern and fear, and may result in avoidance of screening mammography that can detect early cancers.
Sixteen percent of children in pediatric intensive care units (ICUs) have acute neurological conditions with brain damage due to cardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury, or other causes, reports an international survey study in Pediatric Critical Care Medicine.
Kineta, Inc. announced today it has been awarded a $6.8 million subcontract from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), to develop novel vaccine adjuvants (agents that help boost the immune system). The Kineta subcontract is part of a larger $13 million award to the University of Washington.
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