Kim Kurak, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 420 Grove St, Brandon, VT 05733 Phone: 802-247-6305 Fax: 802-247-6040 |
Lucy Mckeon, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 61 Court Dr, Brandon, VT 05733 Phone: 802-247-3755 |
William D Barrett, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 61 Court Dr, Brandon, VT 05733 Phone: 802-247-3755 Fax: 802-247-4560 |
George C Fjeld, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 420 Grove St, Brandon, VT 05733 Phone: 802-247-6305 Fax: 802-247-6040 |
Carrie C Wulfman, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 61 Court Dr, Brandon, VT 05733 Phone: 802-247-3756 Fax: 802-247-4560 |
News Archive
Caliber Imaging & Diagnostics, Inc. (Caliber I.D.), an Andover, MA-based medical technologies company with more than 20 years of experience in the design and development of innovative imaging solutions for the examination of tissue at the cellular level, has introduced its first confocal microscope exclusively for the research scientist, the RS-G4.
A new study led by researchers at Boston Medical Center indicates that variations in opioid receptor genes are associated with more severe neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in newborn babies. The findings, published online in Drug & Alcohol Dependence, could help lead to the development of individualized treatment plans tailored to each infants' risk of requiring medication to curb their NAS symptoms, which could help improve these patients' outcomes and reduce how long some stay in the hospital.
USAID officials are in the early stages of planning a Geospatial Intelligence Center, or GeoCenter, that will combine information from "satellite imagery and on-the-ground surveys and reports to cut down on field-based work and give the agency a better sense of where development dollars can do the most good," Nextgov reports.
Chronic kidney disease patients face a greater risk of cardiovascular events such as stent thrombosis after being treated for heart attacks, even if their kidney disease is moderate, according to researchers from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center.
It has long been assumed that menstrual disorders amongst elite female athletes are related to tough training regimes combined with insufficient energy intake. However, a new doctoral thesis from the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet overturns old ideas that elite sport can damage the health. Many elite female athletes can have a congenital condition, that gives them higher levels of testosterone and that might even contribute to their sporting successes.
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