Anne Arundel Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2001 Medical Parkway, Annapolis, Maryland 21401 Ratings: Phone: (443) 481-1307 |
University Of Maryland Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 22 South Greene Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201 Ratings: Phone: (410) 328-8667 |
Mercy Medical Center Inc Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 301 Saint Paul Place, Baltimore, Maryland 21202 Ratings: Phone: (410) 332-9237 |
Johns Hopkins Hospital, The Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21287 Ratings: Phone: (410) 955-9540 |
Saint Agnes Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 900 Caton Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21229 Ratings: Phone: (410) 368-2101 |
Sinai Hospital Of Baltimore Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2401 West Belvedere Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21215 Ratings: Phone: (410) 601-5131 |
Grace Medical Center, Inc Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2000 W Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21223 Ratings: Phone: (410) 362-3000 |
Medstar Franklin Square Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 9000 Franklin Square Drive, Baltimore, Maryland 21237 Ratings: Phone: (443) 777-7850 |
Medstar Union Memorial Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 201 East University Parkway, Baltimore, Maryland 21218 Ratings: Phone: (410) 554-2227 |
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 4940 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21224 Ratings: Phone: (410) 550-0123 |
Medstar Harbor Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 3001 South Hanover Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21225 Ratings: Phone: (410) 350-3201 |
University Of Md Medical Center Midtown Campus Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 827 Linden Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21201 Ratings: Phone: (410) 225-8996 |
Greater Baltimore Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 6701 North Charles Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21204 Ratings: Phone: (443) 849-2000 |
Medstar Good Samaritan Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 5601 Loch Raven Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21239 Ratings: Phone: (443) 444-3902 |
Umd Rehabilitation & Orthopaedic Institute Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2200 Kernan Drive, Baltimore, Maryland 21207 Ratings:NA Phone: (410) 448-6701 |
Levindale Hebrew Geriatric Center And Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2434 West Belvedere Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21209 Ratings:NA Phone: (410) 601-2400 |
Mount Washington Pediatric Hospital Childrens Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1708 West Rogers Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21209 Ratings:NA Phone: (410) 578-5050 |
Kennedy Krieger Institute Childrens Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 707 North Broadway, Baltimore, Maryland 21205 Ratings:NA Phone: (443) 923-9301 |
Sheppard And Enoch Pratt Hospital, The Psychiatric Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 6501 North Charles Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21204 Ratings:NA Phone: (410) 938-3401 |
Umd Upper Chesapeake Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 500 Upper Chesapeake Drive, Bel Air, Maryland 21014 Ratings: Phone: (443) 643-3303 |
News Archive
Developing type 2 diabetes is a lengthy process. An early sign that it has begun is high levels of insulin in the blood. As long as the insulin-producing beta cells are able to compensate for the increased demand, for example when the individual is overweight, the blood sugar levels remain normal. It is not until the capacity for insulin secretion falls below the level needed that type 2 diabetes becomes a fact. The latter stage generally goes quickly, as the stressed beta cells work themselves to death.
Biocides used in the food industry at sublethal doses may be endangering, rather than protecting, public health by increasing antibiotic resistance in bacteria and enhancing their ability to form harmful biofilms, according to a study published ahead of print in Applied and Environmental Microbiology. This is among the first studies to examine the latter phenomenon.
The researchers from Britain and the Netherlands found that the more total dietary fiber and cereal fiber people consumed, the lower their colorectal cancer risk. For example, people who consumed an extra 90 grams of fiber from whole grains a day also had a 20 percent lower risk of colorectal cancer, according to the British Medical Journal review.
Ever since researchers devised a recipe for turning adult cells into cells that look and act like embryonic stem cells, there has been lingering doubt in the field about just how close to embryonic stem cells each of those cell lines really is at a molecular and functional level. Now, researchers reporting in the February 4th issue of the journal Cell, a Cell Press publication, have developed a systematic way to lay those doubts about quality to rest.
Scientists have created an app that uses Smartphone selfies to detect pancreatic cancer while it is in the early stages.
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