Katarzyna A Zorns, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4328 Old Green Bay Rd, Mt Pleasant, WI 53403 Phone: 262-687-7606 Fax: 262-687-7615 |
Dr. Thomas Edward Goodrich, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6015 Durand Ave, Suite 500, Mt Pleasant, WI 53406 Phone: 262-456-1000 |
Sharee Lanee Chance-lawson, D.O. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4328 Old Green Bay Rd, Mt Pleasant, WI 53403 Phone: 262-687-7606 Fax: 262-687-7615 |
News Archive
The Huntington Study Group (HSG), under the leadership of Ray Dorsey, M.D. with Johns Hopkins Medical and Diana Rosas, M.D. with Massachusetts General Hospital, is conducting a clinical trial in Huntington's disease (HD) throughout the United States and Australia, "A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, study to assess the safety and tolerability, and efficacy of PBT2 in patients with early to mid-stage Huntington's disease" comparing a 100 mg dose or 250 mg dose versus placebo.
Republican congressman Paul Ryan plans to unveil a new Medicare proposal Thursday that would give future seniors the choice of purchasing private insurance coverage or staying in the traditional federal plan. The concept, which is backed by Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, steps back from the House Budget Chairman's previous plan to end the traditional fee-for-service Medicare program for future retirees and replace it with subsidies that seniors would use to purchase private health plans.
A rare but fatal disease of blood vessels in the lung may be caused in part by aberrant silencing of genes rather than genetic mutation, new research reports. Pulmonary arterial hypertension, a syndrome characterized by gradual blockage of blood vessels in the lungs, has been linked to genetic causes in a small percentage of patients. But University of Chicago researchers have now found that a form of epigenetics - the modification of gene expression - causes the disease in an animal model and could contribute to the disease in humans.
For the foreseeable future, the health care debate probably isn't going to get any less intense. Instead, what we've watched unfold since 2009 is what we should expect for years, decades, a generation: a grinding, exhausting argument over how to pay for health care in a society that's growing older, consuming more care, and (especially if current secularizing trends persist) becoming more and more invested in postponing death.
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