Dr. Andrew H Rhea, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1204 E Cheves St, Florence, SC 29506 Phone: 843-673-0122 Fax: 843-673-0227 |
Ioannis Karampelas, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 805 Pamplico Hwy, Florence, SC 29505 Phone: 843-792-1414 |
Dr. William B Naso, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1204 E Cheves St, Florence, SC 29506 Phone: 843-673-0122 Fax: 843-673-0227 |
Dr. Ward Curtis Worthington Iii, MD Neurological Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Musc Health Florence Medical Center, 805 Pamplico Hwy, Florence, SC 29505 Phone: 843-674-5000 |
News Archive
As was the case during the last debt-ceiling debacle, in 2011, playing politics with the nation's creditworthiness is irresponsible and unnecessary. Leave aside the ObamaCare obsession, because Republicans have zero chance of persuading the president to kill one of his defining achievements.
Nearly a quarter of Americans live in rural areas, which consistently report higher cancer mortality rates than urban and suburban areas. Among the complex causes for this disparity is that only 10 percent of physicians practice in rural areas and almost 4 out of 10 rural residents live at least an hour from an urban area. Finding the time, transportation, and financial resources for travel to urban academic medical centers, the standard bearers for quality cancer care, often proves difficult.
As busy people, we juggle many tasks, keep many balls in the air, and try to avoid letting anything drop. In class, instructors toss out ideas; sometimes they go over our heads, but other times we grasp them quickly.
Karl Klose, professor of biology and a researcher in UTSA's South Texas Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases, has teamed up with researchers at Ruhr University in Bochum, Germany to understand how humans get infected with cholera.
A political drive, led by the UK and US, to screen older people for minor memory changes (often called mild cognitive impairment or pre-dementia) is leading to unnecessary investigation and potentially harmful treatment for what is arguably an inevitable consequence of ageing, warn University of Sydney experts in in a paper published in the British Medical Journal today.
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