Mary Ellen Gaeke, MD Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 82 N Breiel Blvd, Middletown, OH 45042 Phone: 513-422-3119 Fax: 513-420-1848 |
Radhika Rajsheker, MD Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 501 Atrium Dr Ste 100, Middletown, OH 45005 Phone: 937-293-1622 Fax: 937-245-6308 |
Dr. Nkeiruka Eucharia Okoye, MD Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 501 Atrium Dr Ste 100, Middletown, OH 45005 Phone: 937-293-1622 Fax: 937-245-6308 |
Dr. Mridula Puchalapalli Reddy, MD Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 501 Atrium Dr Ste 100, Middletown, OH 45005 Phone: 937-293-1622 Fax: 937-245-6308 |
News Archive
As the new health insurance exchanges prepare to open for business, a new Harris Poll provides more evidence of how few Americans understand how they will work. Large majorities of the public, including the uninsured Americans who are supposed to use the exchanges, know little or nothing about them.
Genentech, a member of the Roche Group, today announced that a pivotal Phase II clinical study of its investigational Hedgehog Pathway Inhibitor, vismodegib (RG3616/GDC-0449), showed positive results in people with advanced basal cell carcinoma (aBCC), a particularly severe and debilitating form of skin cancer.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center has been chosen by the National Institutes of Health to be the Data and Research Support Center for the Precision Medicine Initiative Cohort Program, a landmark study of genetic, environmental and lifestyle factors affecting the health of a million or more people, federal officials have announced.
Origin Biotechnology, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Origin Agritech Limited announced it has reached an comprehensive, worldwide agreement with the Institute of Plant Protection, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS). CAAS jointly own the rights to the internally developed Bt-gene.
A new study has shown that, contrary to popular belief, local domestic animals are unlikely to be the major source of antibiotic resistant Salmonella in humans. The result comes from a detailed study of DNA from more than 370 Salmonella samples collected over a 22-year period.
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