San Juan Municipal Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: Barrio Monacillos,centro Medico, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00936 Ratings:NA Phone: (787) 756-8535 |
Hospital Universitario De Adulto Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: Barrio Monacillos Centromedico, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00927 Ratings:NA Phone: (787) 754-0101 |
Centro Cardiovascular Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: Avenida Americo Miranda, Entrada Principal Cm, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00936 Ratings:NA Phone: (787) 754-8500 |
San Juan Capestrano Hospital Inc Psychiatric Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: Carr 877 Km 1 6 Camino Las Lomas Rr2, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00928 Ratings:NA Phone: (787) 765-2900 |
News Archive
Multiplicom NV, a specialist in the development, production and commercialization of innovative molecular genetic tests based on massively parallel sequencing, today announces that it is launching a CE/IVD labeled MID kit for Illumina MiSeq together with three new germline mutation detection MASTRTM kits enabling the identification of individuals at risk for maturity onset diabetes of the young, autosomal dominant hypercholesterolemia, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Medicity – the leading provider of health information exchange (HIE) technology that empowers physicians, hospitals and communities with solutions to improve care collaboration – today reported a sharp, 91 percent increase in bookings in 2009 over the previous year and a 35 percent increase in five-year revenue backlog.
For the first time researchers have shown that by inhibiting the action of an enzyme called TAK-1, it is possible to make pancreatic cancer cells sensitive to chemotherapy, opening the way for the development of a new drug to treat the disease.
Garmin International, Inc., a unit of Garmin Ltd., today announced the vívofit jr. 2 kid's fitness tracker with Marvel's Spider-Man themed bands and mobile app. So much more than a fitness device, the vívofit jr. 2 provides kids with an interactive experience where activity unlocks adventure, shaping habits for lifelong health and fitness.
Using recent advances in marine biomechanics, materials science, and tissue engineering, a team of researchers at Harvard University and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have turned inanimate silicone and living cardiac muscle cells into a freely swimming "jellyfish."
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