Dr. Eric F Sabety, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 475 Bruce St, Yreka, CA 96097 Phone: 530-842-1267 Fax: 530-842-9121 |
Scott Charles Epperly, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 475 Bruce Street, Fairchild Medical Center, Yreka, CA 96097 Phone: 530-841-2049 |
Dr. Wilfred Walter Eastman Jr., M.D/ Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 475 Bruce St, Yreka, CA 96097 Phone: 530-842-1267 Fax: 530-842-9121 |
Dr. Daniel William Bullock, M.D. Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 475 Bruce Street, Yreka, CA 96097 Phone: 530-842-1267 Fax: 530-842-9121 |
News Archive
An Australian scientist will bring effective screening for tuberculosis a step closer with his latest study in Vietnam- where he now lives and works.
The Supreme Court sent back to a lower court a case on whether Medicaid recipients and medical providers can sue California for cutting reimbursement rates in the healthcare program for low-income Americans. ... The case involved a plan by California's lawmakers in 2008 to slash Medicaid payments to doctors, hospitals and other medical providers to help reduce the state's massive budget deficit.
The Independent examines the expansion of human diseases that originated in animals. "At least 45 diseases that have passed from animals to humans have been reported to U.N. agencies in the last two decades, with the number expected to escalate in the coming years," the Independent writes.
From family conflict to anxiety about not being able to buy gifts for everyone on their list, women and men are more stressed about the 2009 holiday season than last year, according to a new study commissioned by Breakthrough at Caron, a five-and-a-half day intensive wellness program designed for adults seeking to break unhealthy life patterns. Breakthrough at Caron is part of Caron Treatment Centers, a 52-year-old nonprofit addiction treatment center located in Pennsylvania.
Black women with breast cancer are more likely than Hispanic or white women to experience delays in the initiation of chemotherapy or radiation after surgery, finds a new study in Health Services Research.
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