Danielle Anne Woodall-williams, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 8268 164th St, Jamaica, NY 11432 Phone: 718-883-3225 Fax: 718-883-6193 |
Avani A Patel, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 13420 Jamaica Ave, Jamaica, NY 11418 Phone: 718-206-6742 Fax: 718-206-6905 |
Dr. Anastasia Novikov, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 8268 164th St, Jamaica, NY 11432 Phone: 718-883-3000 |
News Archive
USAID is expanding its Indoor Residual Spraying program in Africa, according to a USAID press release. Through a $189 million, three-year contract, "the President's Malaria Initiative … together with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will provide technical and financial support to the Ministries of Health and National Malaria Control Programs in African countries to build country-level capacity for malaria prevention activities," according to the release.
For the second time in three years, Dr. Siegal's Cookie Diet success stories are celebrated in People magazine's annual Half Their Size cover story. Marty and Grace Moorehead of Phoenix lost 182 and 51 pounds respectively by following celebrity weight-loss expert Dr. Sanford Siegal's 36 year old weight-loss regimen under the supervision of their own physicians. Marty Moorehead lost half of his 360 pounds and has kept the weight off for a year. The People article is online at http://tinyurl.com/2vl2apk.
A global study of nearly 10,000 women with early breast cancer has found wide variations in how they were treated, despite international consensus on best practice, according to the May issue of the British Journal of Surgery.
Temple University Hospital (TUH) could be among the first U.S.-based hospitals to test a new device known as a multilayer stent in patients suffering from aortic aneurysm, a condition characterized by the formation of a potentially life-threatening bulge in the aorta.
Scientists have created new kinds of particles, 1/100th the diameter of a human hair, that spontaneously assemble themselves into structures resembling molecules made from atoms. These new particles come together, or "self-assemble," to form structures in patterns that were previously impossible to make and hold promise for manufacturing advanced optical materials and ceramics.
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