Williamsport Regional Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 700 High Street, Williamsport, Pennsylvania 17701 Ratings: Phone: (570) 321-2389 |
Chan Soon- Shiong Medical Center At Windber Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 600 Somerset Avenue, Windber, Pennsylvania 15963 Ratings: Phone: (814) 467-3000 |
Main Line Hospital Lankenau Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 100 Lancaster Ave, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania 19096 Ratings: Phone: (610) 645-2000 |
Surgical Institute Of Reading Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2752 Century Boulevard, Wyomissing, Pennsylvania 19610 Ratings:NA Phone: (717) 999-9999 |
York Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1001 South George Street, York, Pennsylvania 17403 Ratings: Phone: (717) 851-2345 |
Upmc Memorial Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1701 Innovation Drive, York, Pennsylvania 17408 Ratings: Phone: (717) 843-8623 |
Oss Orthopaedic Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1861 Powder Mill Rd, York, Pennsylvania 17402 Ratings:NA Phone: (717) 718-2000 |
Wellspan Surgery And Rehabilitation Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 55 Monument Road, York, Pennsylvania 17403 Ratings:NA Phone: (717) 812-6100 |
News Archive
Along with many other harmful health consequences, smoking tobacco causes chemical changes, oxidative stress and inflammation in the brain. Excessive alcohol use can have similar effects.
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. announced today that the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana has issued a decision invalidating two patents listed in the FDA's Orange Book for Eli Lilly's Evista® (raloxifene hydrochloride) Tablets in litigation concerning Teva's abbreviated new drug application to market a generic version. The court found these patents to be invalid for lack of written description.
Cardiovascular disease patients have lower levels of an important family of protective molecules in their blood in the morning, which could be increasing their risk of blood clots and heart attacks at those times, according to early research led by Queen Mary University of London.
Among a large sample of COVID-19 patients, researchers found that a genetic variant – caused by an amino acid substitution from valine to methionine – is associated with a reduced chance of severe disease.
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