Dr. Jonas Joaquin Gopez, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2510 Maryland Rd, Ste185, Willow Grove, PA 19090 Phone: 215-657-5886 Fax: 215-657-5844 |
Dr. Steven Jon Barrer, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2510 Maryland Rd, Ste 185, Willow Grove, PA 19090 Phone: 215-657-5886 Fax: 215-657-5844 |
Douglas W Laske, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2510 Maryland Rd Ste 185, Willow Grove, PA 19090 Phone: 215-657-5886 Fax: 215-657-9996 |
Dr. Michael Sungshick Yoon, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2510 Maryland Rd, Ste 185, Willow Grove, PA 19090 Phone: 215-657-5886 Fax: 215-657-9996 |
News Archive
The physicians of Joint Implant Surgeons are proud to be participating in Operation Walk USA 2012, on December 7th, to provide joint replacement surgeries to patients across the United States who would otherwise be unable to receive appropriate and much needed surgical care due to financial circumstances.
Learning Lab, Brentwood will present a free seminar, Does My Child Have ADHD? Diagnosing and What's Next?, on Thursday June 24, 2010 from 7:00-8:00 PM at the Maryland Farms YMCA in Brentwood. The seminar will be presented by Dr. David Elkins, Clinical Psychologist and Supervising Psychologist of Learning Lab, and Vanessa Adams, School Psychologist of Learning Lab, Brentwood.
Ultrasound diagnosis is an indispensable tool for a variety of clinical applications and users have high expectations that challenge modern, powerful ultrasound platforms. With the new brand ARIETTA , Hitachi presents a new solution that meets these demands.
Researcher Christian Duval, PhD, and his team have developed a new, simple and non-invasive approach to create a biomechanical and cognitive profile of football players and more quickly and accurately detect concussions in these individuals. Christian Duval and his post-doctoral student Hung Nguyen, PhD, work at the Research Centre of the Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal, which is affiliated with the University of Montreal.
Patients with major depression who fail to see improvement after taking an antidepressant often have their initial medication switched or combined with a second drug. Many clinicians weigh the possibility of adverse side effects when deciding between strategies. New research in the latest issue of General Hospital Psychiatry now suggests one strategy may not be any more likely to be harmful than the other.
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