Dr. Timothy William Joyner, O.D Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 280 Woodward Road, Westminster, MD 21157 Phone: 410-857-4759 Fax: 410-857-1740 |
Dr. Boaz Schwartz, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 405 N Center St, Westminster, MD 21157 Phone: 410-857-3734 Fax: 410-857-9043 |
Westminster Family Vision Center, Inc. Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 5 Carroll Plz, Westminster, MD 21157 Phone: 410-848-9243 Fax: 410-876-0841 |
Dr. David Bittings, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 200 Washington Heights Med Ctr, Suite 200, Westminster, MD 21157 Phone: 410-848-4095 Fax: 410-848-5314 |
Purvi Patel, OD Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 400 N Center St, Westminster, MD 21157 Phone: 410-751-6375 Fax: 410-751-6729 |
News Archive
The mystery behind a commonly untreatable and undetected heart muscle disease in children is partially revealed for the first time in today's edition of the scientific journal JAMA.
As an important supplier to the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, New England Biolabs is pleased to announce that the Sanger Institute will use New England Biolabs as one of its suppliers for next-generation sequencing library construction reagents.
A U.N. Conference on Trade and Development report issued last week suggested "[l]ocal production of pharmaceuticals in some poor African and Asian countries, such as Ethiopia, Uganda, and Bangladesh, has the potential to improve access to essential drugs for many of the one billion people who live in the world's least developed countries," BMJ News writes.
It is still unclear why some women go into labor for long periods, and some face a high risk of childbirth. Also, some women fall pregnant quickly, while others may take years before they conceive. The answer may be due to a gene inherited from the Neanderthals, an extinct species or subspecies of archaic humans who lived in Eurasia until about 40,000 years ago.
The images are heartbreaking: thousands of infants born with small, misshapen heads, the result of a rare neurological disorder, called microcephaly, which can cause a myriad of intellectual and developmental disabilities. The culprit? Zika, a mosquito-borne virus that has swept through many parts of South America and more recently surfaced in Florida.
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