Bonnie Walker, Nurse Practitioner - Adult Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 510 Bank St, Cape May, NJ 08204 Phone: 609-884-2121 |
Abosede O Ajayi, Nurse Practitioner - Psych/Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 502 Us -9, Cape May Court House, Cape May, NJ 08210 Phone: 609-465-7633 |
Joseph Larkin, A.P.N Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 900 Route 109, Cape May, NJ 08204 Phone: 609-884-4357 |
Ms. Gina Caroline Maloney, APN,C. Nurse Practitioner - Adult Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 414 Portsmouth Rd, Cape May, NJ 08204 Phone: 609-898-1148 |
News Archive
The International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) announced today that the Government of Japan pledged a US$10 million grant to support AIDS vaccine research and development over the next five years. The grant, which will be channeled through a newly established World Bank trust fund, is the first of its kind from the Japanese government to IAVI.
Johns Hopkins tissue engineers have used tiny, artificial fiber scaffolds thousands of times smaller than a human hair to help coax stem cells into developing into cartilage, the shock-absorbing lining of elbows and knees that often wears thin from injury or age. Reporting online June 4 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, investigators produce an important component of cartilage in both laboratory and animal models.
Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University hosted a roundtable discussion on stem cell research with New York Governor David A. Paterson today. Allen M. Spiegel, M.D., the Marilyn and Stanley M. Katz Dean of Einstein, and eight stem cell researchers discussed advances in medical therapies and treatments that Einstein scientists have been investigating since receiving more than $14 million in State funding for stem cell research.
In the five years after their diagnosis, people living with HIV in developed countries and receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy are no more likely to die than HIV-negative people, according to a study published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Reuters reports (Kahn, Reuters, 7/1).
Cardiac arrests that can be treated by electric stimulation, also known as shockable arrests, were found at a higher frequency in public settings than in the home, according to a National Institutes of Health-funded study appearing in the Jan. 27 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
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