Nicole Eva Gross, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 W Sproul Rd Ste 100, Springfield, PA 19064 Phone: 610-690-4900 |
Dr. Nancy W. Crawford, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 W Sproul Road, Healthplex Pavilion Ii - Suite 100, Springfield, PA 19064 Phone: 610-690-4900 Fax: 610-690-1659 |
Dr. Joshua Steiner, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 W Sproul Rd Ste 100, Springfield, PA 19064 Phone: 610-690-4900 |
Dr. An Thien Vo, M.D. Ophthalmology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 W Sproul Rd Ste 100, Springfield, PA 19064 Phone: 610-690-4900 |
News Archive
As modern medical advances help more children with complex conditions live longer, a new study shows a significant number suffer from complications caused by medical devices that are also necessary for their survival.
With every unfinished meal since Band Aid, you've heard it: "people are starving in Africa, y'know". True, the UN estimates that rich countries throw away nearly as much food as the entire net production of sub-Saharan Africa - about 230 million tonnes per year. But is it any less a waste to eat the excess food?
n an important step toward eradicating tuberculosis, the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), an affiliate of City of Hope, has signed a licensing agreement with an international biomedical firm, Advanced Biological Laboratories, to market and distribute TGen's patented Next Generation Sequencing-based TB test technology.
Chest ultrasound can serve as a viable alternative to chest CT in the evaluation of pediatric patients with complicated pneumonia and parapneumonic effusion (a build-up of fluid between the lung and chest wall), according to a study published in the December issue of the American Journal of Roentgenology.
UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibe on Monday during a five-day trip in Kenya, called for a drastic reduction in mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, Capital News reports. "In our continent we still have 400,000 babies born every year with HIV and we know if we are capable of making sure that testing will become available universally to all our pregnant women, (and) that pregnant women also have access to treatment, we will prevent the transmission," Sidibe said (Karong'o, 1/11).
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