Dr. Ronald S Weber, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 Corporate Center Dr, Suite 100, Morrow, GA 30260 Phone: 770-968-8888 Fax: 770-960-2473 |
John Coghlan Allen, Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 Corporate Center Dr Ste 100, Morrow, GA 30260 Phone: 770-968-8888 |
Joon Y Kim, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 Corporate Center Dr, Ste 100, Morrow, GA 30260 Phone: 770-968-8888 Fax: 770-960-2473 |
News Archive
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health, has awarded approximately $36.3 million to three academic institutions to conduct research to develop vaccines to protect against multiple types of coronaviruses and viral variants.
The National Cancer Institute-Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH) phase II precision medicine trial, known to doctors as trial EAY131, is open through the ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group.
A group of scientists at B.C. Cancer Agency have found that lung cancers in smokers have different genetic mutations and look different than lung cancer in non-smokers. According to senior scientist at the BC Cancer Agency Research Centre Wan Lam, this finding is significant because it means that from now on, research, treatments and diagnostics should be tailored to the distinct genetic variations in the different lung cancers instead of expecting that a one-size fits all approach will work. He said, "At the current time, treatment does not distinguish between these different types. The subtypes are all grouped together. But with this work, we are beginning to tease out the subtypes." The study was presented Tuesday at a conference in Philadelphia of the American Association of Cancer Research.
A molecule that is not only dangerous, but can help the brain grow. A few years ago it was found that certain proteins, the prions, when defective are dangerous, as they are involved in neurodegenerative syndromes such as the Creutzfeldt-Jakob and the Alzheimer diseases.
Researchers from the Department of Veterans Affairs and Boston University School of Medicine have found that health care reform in Massachusetts has improved minority access for some inpatient procedures. These findings are being presented today at the annual Society of General Internal Medicine annual meetings in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
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