Eric Gilberto Hernandez-ortiz, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Liberty Office Plaza Suite 2, Carr. 735 Km 0.5, Cayey, PR 00736 Phone: 787-678-4092 Fax: 939-731-3926 |
Elena Margarita Iguina Gonzalez, M.D. Orthopaedic Surgery - Foot and Ankle Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Hospital Menonita, Edificion Profesional Suite 305-a, Cayey, PR 00737 Phone: 787-535-1001 |
Oscar A Duyos, M.D. Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Edificio Profesional, Suite 405 Hospital Menonita, Cayey, PR 00736 Phone: 787-918-0300 |
Andres Rafael Muniz Martinez, MD Orthopaedic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Edificio Profesional Menonita De Cayey, Suite 305, Cayey, PR 00737 Phone: 787-535-1001 |
News Archive
Hawaii Pacific Health, Saint Barnabas Health Care System N.J., and XCelience LLC, have received CEO Cancer Gold Standardâ„¢ accreditation, recognizing the commitment of these organizations to reducing the risk of cancer for employees and their families by promoting healthy lifestyle choices, encouraging early detection through cancer screenings, and ensuring access to quality treatment.
Johnson & Johnson provided additional information today on its amended agreement with Merck regarding distribution rights for REMICADE (infliximab) and SIMPONI (golimumab) in markets outside the United States. The amended agreement announced today in a separate news release from both companies concludes a pending arbitration, which had been filed by Johnson & Johnson in May 2009.
A simple yet enormously effective patient surveillance system implemented by anesthesiologists at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (DHMC) in Lebanon, New Hampshire has proven to dramatically decrease the number of rescue calls and intensive care unit transfers in postsurgical patients, allowing doctors to intervene in more cases before a crisis situation develops.
A new study from researchers at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and colleagues suggests a slowdown in the use of convalescent plasma to treat hospitalized COVID-19 patients led to a higher COVID-19 mortality during a critical period during this past winter's surge.
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