Dr. Mark David Solomon, M.D. Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 701 Route 25a, Suite B1, Mount Sinai, NY 11766 Phone: 631-331-4403 Fax: 631-331-1932 |
Dr. Yanping Yu, M.D. Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 701 Route 25a, Suite B1, Mount Sinai, NY 11766 Phone: 631-331-4403 Fax: 631-331-1932 |
Dr. Alfred Raciti, M.D. Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 701 Route 25a, Suite B1, Mount Sinai, NY 11766 Phone: 631-331-4403 Fax: 631-331-1932 |
Dr. Brian Tin Chu, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 701 Route 25a, Suite B1, Mount Sinai, NY 11766 Phone: 631-331-4403 Fax: 631-331-1932 |
News Archive
There is a lesson in this unexpected juxtaposition nevertheless: No nation can safely base its tax and spending plans on inflexible commitments. Political life, both domestic and international, is too unpredictable. Yet U.S. government spending is mostly on autopilot. The government is scheduled to lay out $3.8 trillion this fiscal year -; 70 percent of which will go to mandatory-spending programs, chiefly Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and interest on the federal debt. Mr. Obama's plan for fiscal 2015 does not change this; it would increase overall spending slightly, paying for it with selected tax increases, while shifting money among priorities here and there. But these tweaks would take place within the same 30 percent of discretionary spending that the current budget contains (3/4).
Researchers from Universidad Politécnica de Madrid have obtained 3D printed floating photocatalysts to remove persistent pollutants in wastewater.
Can long-term pain and disability be predicted in individuals recovering from non-life-threatening orthopedic injuries? A team of Australian researchers writing in The Journal of Pain, the peer review journal of the American Pain Society, www.ampainsoc.org, says yes and believes psychological factors, such as pessimism about recovery and depression, are major predictors of chronic pain in trauma patients.
According to a new major study just two glasses of a wine a day can increase the risk of breast cancer among women by 50%. Researchers also warn that women who drink regularly in their 20s and 30s are far more likely to develop breast cancer in later life, regardless of whether they reduce their alcohol consumption.
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