Tanisha Esannason Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 377 Valley Rd Ste 2636, Clifton, NJ 07013 Phone: 908-845-3506 |
Maria Ruiz-pedraza, LAC Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 83 Normandy Rd, Clifton, NJ 07013 Phone: 973-768-6252 |
Ms. Cheryl Lieberman, MS EDS LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 94 Virginia Ave, Clifton, NJ 07012 Phone: 917-974-1308 |
Desiree Hanna Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 777 Bloomfield Ave, Clifton, NJ 07012 Phone: 973-594-0125 |
Mrs. Maryann Scafidi, ED.S.,LMFT,LPC Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1030 Clifton Ave, Suite 209, Clifton, NJ 07013 Phone: 973-473-7488 Fax: 973-272-2448 |
Ms. Jacqueline Ortiz, LAMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1157 Main Ave, Clifton, NJ 07011 Phone: 973-341-9869 |
News Archive
German researchers determined that concentrations of the sex hormones, testosterone in men and estrogen in women, may have a positive effect on the regenerative potential of cartilage tissue. The study suggests hormone replacement in the joint fluid of men and women might be beneficial in treating late stages of human osteoarthritis by regenerating damaged tissue.
InVivo Therapeutics Holdings Corp., a developer of groundbreaking technologies for the treatment of spinal cord injuries and other neurotrauma conditions, today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the Company's Investigational Device Exemption to begin human studies to test its biopolymer scaffold product, a technology developed to treat patients with acute, traumatic SCI.
A team of researchers from Boston University, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts Institute of Technology recently made a discovery that changes a long held paradigm about how bacteria move through soft gels.
A new analysis has found that Hispanic lung cancer patients seem to live longer than white or black patients. Published early online in Cancer, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the study suggests that, as with several other types of cancer, certain yet-to-be-defined genetic and/or environmental factors put Hispanic patients at a survival advantage.
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