Herbert Eugene Stockard, M. D. Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2702 Navarre Ave, Suite 201, Oregon, OH 43616 Phone: 419-698-8560 Fax: 419-698-8570 |
David Babajide Da Rocha Afodu, M.D Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2702 Navarre, Suite 201, Oregon, OH 43616 Phone: 419-698-8560 Fax: 419-698-8570 |
Elizabeth Kidder Grames, APRN Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2702 Navarre Ave Ste 201, Oregon, OH 43616 Phone: 419-698-8560 Fax: 419-698-8570 |
Akinfemi Samson Afolabi, M.D. Internal Medicine - Nephrology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2702 Navarre Ave, Suite 201, Oregon, OH 43616 Phone: 419-698-8560 Fax: 419-698-8570 |
News Archive
The Chronic Liver Disease Foundation announced today that it's collaborating with Walgreens to offer free hepatitis C (HCV) testing with the OraQuick HCV Rapid Test at more than 60 Walgreens retail pharmacies in 12 major cities throughout the country.
In the past few years, artificial intelligence models of language have become very good at certain tasks. Most notably, they excel at predicting the next word in a string of text; this technology helps search engines and texting apps predict the next word you are going to type.
Lobectomy and anatomic segmentectomy appear to offer similar perioperative and oncological outcomes in patients with stage I non-small-cell lung cancer, analysis suggests.
Young people who don't view health insurance as a priority are wary of health-overhaul legislation now in Congress that would require them to buy it or face a penalty. For instance, "Poor and bludgeoned by debt accrued over four years of college - but otherwise healthy - medical insurance just isn't in the cards for aspiring-artist Joanna Zobjeck," the Oshkosh (Wis.) Northwestern reports.
State laws and policies governing the storage and use of surplus blood samples taken from newborns as part of the routine health screening process range from explicit to non-existent, leaving many parents ill-informed about how their babies' left over blood might be used, according to a team led by a member of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, in collaboration with researchers from the University of Utah. A report on their analysis of the subject is published March 28 in the journal Pediatrics.
› Verified 4 days ago