Martin J Hrynick, M.D. General Practice Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 226 Main St, Sherman, ME 04776 Phone: 207-365-4335 Fax: 207-365-4336 |
John Marley Dickens, MD General Practice Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 592 W Main St, Waldoboro, ME 04572 Phone: 207-832-6394 Fax: 207-832-4392 |
Ira W. Stockwell, D.O. General Practice Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 344 Cumberland St, Westbrook, ME 04092 Phone: 207-854-8200 Fax: 207-854-8200 |
Robert P. Hayes, D.O. General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 11 Bolduc Ave, Winslow, ME 04901 Phone: 207-873-0878 |
Erin H Mansmann, DO General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10 Forest Falls Dr, Yarmouth, ME 04096 Phone: 207-846-7676 |
News Archive
Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is one of the most common surgical procedures performed in the United States, according to background information in the article. In appropriately selected patients, CABG surgery results in improved survival, relief of angina, and improved quality of life. Despite frequent use of artery grafts, vein grafts remain the most frequently used conduit.
Researchers have found that people born with a rare abnormality of their chromosomes have a 2,700-fold increased risk of a rare childhood leukaemia. In this abnormality, two specific chromosomes are fused together but become prone to catastrophic shattering.
Working in conjunction with the Haitian Ministry of Health and the Haitian aid group GHESKIO, Boston-based Partners In Health (PIH) will begin an immunization campaign in January aimed at providing two doses of the oral cholera vaccine Shanchol "to 100,000 Haitians living in two vulnerable communities: a neighborhood in Port-au-Prince, where potable water and latrines are luxuries, and to an isolated rural village in the lower Artibonite Valley region," the Miami Herald reports.
According to health insurances, employees in IT-industries are very fit. By using an online-survey, Technische Universität Dortmund monitored this statement in cooperation with some freelancer-networks. Results indicate that this is due to the phenomenon "presentism"- meaning IT-employees do not appear in health insurance statistics as they continue to work even when they are ill. Actually, the sample reported on distinct health problems- predominantly musculoskeletal problems and mental afflictions.
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