Artemio Capili Santiago, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5409 Ave O, Suite 107, Fort Madison, IA 52627 Phone: 319-372-7270 Fax: 319-372-7279 |
Dr. Pauline Mungai, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5409 Avenue O, Fort Madison, IA 52627 Phone: 319-376-2134 |
Roseller Libarnes, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5409 Avenue O, Fort Madison, IA 52627 Phone: 319-376-2134 Fax: 319-376-2188 |
Dr. Victoria Kogan, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5409 Avenue O, Fort Madison, IA 52627 Phone: 319-376-2134 Fax: 319-376-2188 |
Lisa Bishop, DO Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5409 Avenue O, Fort Madison, IA 52627 Phone: 319-376-2134 Fax: 319-376-2188 |
News Archive
An international blood pressure study comparing two single-pill drug combinations has yielded results so significant that the study has been stopped early and the researchers say their findings might alter the way high blood pressure is treated worldwide.
Media outlets continued to track the major developments in HIV/AIDS this week, including: prevention research using an antiretroviral; new UNAIDS estimates of HIV/AIDS around the world; and Pope Benedict XVI's stance on condoms for HIV prevention.
Music is currently played in approximately 50% to 70% of surgical operations performed worldwide. In a new study of 20 operations conducted in the UK, repeated requests-for example, for a surgical instrument-were 5 times more likely to occur in surgeries with music than in those without.
At a time when cancer drug prices are rising rapidly, an innovative new study provides the framework for establishing value-based pricing for all new oncology drugs entering the marketplace. Using a highly sophisticated economic model, researchers from Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University and Georgia Institute of Technology used an example of a new lung cancer drug.
Surviving a case of COVID-19 that's bad enough to land you in the hospital is hard enough. But life after the hospital stay - and especially after an intensive care stay - is no bed of roses, either, according to a new study.
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