Marcia Patricia Walter, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 96 Sofia Dr Ste 208, Shrewsbury, PA 17361 Phone: 717-812-2400 Fax: 717-812-3005 |
Phillip Robert Macdonald, Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 96 Sofia Dr Ste 208, Shrewsbury, PA 17361 Phone: 717-812-2400 Fax: 717-812-3005 |
Mrs. Candace Katelynn Fazenbaker, CRNP-FNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 96 Sofia Dr, Shrewsbury, PA 17361 Phone: 717-812-2400 |
Christine Marie Hudgins, CRNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 16312 Mount Airy Rd, Shrewsbury, PA 17361 Phone: 717-227-3800 Fax: 717-227-3802 |
News Archive
A national task force announced Thursday that it is recommending the immediate implementation of a new diagnostic equation for measuring kidney function, which advocates say will promote health equity and increase access to transplantation for Black patients.
Tomosynthesis detects 40% more breast cancers than traditional mammography does, according to a major screening study from Lund University, Sweden. This is the first large-scale study to compare the screening method with regular mammograms. The 3D X-ray technique is also more comfortable for women, as breast compression is halved.
With March designated as Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, the North Shore-LIJ Cancer Institute is enrolling people who were recently treated for colon cancer in a polyp prevention study. This National Cancer Institute (NCI)-sponsored study evaluates the cholesterol drug, rosuvastatin (Crestor), as a treatment to reduce the risk of colon cancer.
Microbes are everywhere - thousands of species are in your mouth, and thousands are in a glass of tap water. The ones in your mouth are mostly harmless - as long as you brush and floss so they don't form a biofilm that allows gum disease a path into the blood stream.
Johns Hopkins researchers report that the deletion of any single gene in yeast cells puts pressure on the organism's genome to compensate, leading to a mutation in another gene. Their discovery, which is likely applicable to human genetics because of the way DNA is conserved across species, could have significant consequences for the way genetic analysis is done in cancer and other areas of research, they say.
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