Kaye E Jaworowski, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 50 Pinewood Rd, Elliot Family Health Center At Suncook, Allenstown, NH 03275 Phone: 603-485-7861 Fax: 603-485-2437 |
Chandra Lee Anguiano, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 50 Pinewood Rd, Allenstown, NH 03275 Phone: 603-485-7861 |
Leah Marie Cadegan Paquette, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 50 Pinewood Rd, Allenstown, NH 03275 Phone: 603-485-7861 Fax: 603-485-2437 |
Monique S Cote-melendez, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 50 Pinewood Rd, Elliot Family Health Center At Suncook, Allenstown, NH 03275 Phone: 603-485-7861 |
News Archive
The study included four radiologists who interpreted 268 digital screening mammograms and 189 film-screening mammograms. "The average interpretation time for all of our readers was 240 seconds (4 minutes) for digital screening mammograms and 127 seconds (2 minutes, 7 seconds) for film-screen screening mammograms," said Tamara Miner Haygood, MD, lead author of the study.
Although not all Republican governors are pushing to change Medicaid into a block-grant program, there seems to be general agreement for seeking greater flexibility in how states spend Medicaid dollars. Reports also persist that some Democratic lawmakers appear open to plans to chip away at Medicaid's requirements.
Elderly patients who undergo surgery at teaching-intensive hospitals have better survival rates than at nonteaching hospitals, but these better survival rates apparently occur in white patients, not black patients.
A computer-assisted diagnostic procedure helps physicians detect the growth of low-grade brain tumors earlier and at smaller volumes than visual comparison alone, according to a study published May 28 in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine by Hassan Fathallah-Shaykh of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and colleagues.
Patients who don't respond to treatments that use their own immune cells to destroy tumors, called tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, share changes in mechanisms that switch genes on or off in those cells, according to study results presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Oncology on June 4 in Chicago.
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