Dr. George M Inabinet Jr., MD Pain Medicine - Interventional Pain Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 171 Ashley Ave, Charleston, SC 29425 Phone: 843-792-1414 |
Dr. Dale Raymond Tabor, M.D. Pain Medicine - Interventional Pain Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 109 Bee St, Va Anesthesia Service, Charleston, SC 29401 Phone: 843-789-7345 |
Jeffrey W Folk, Pain Medicine - Interventional Pain Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 125 Doughty St, Ste 420, Charleston, SC 29403 Phone: 843-723-3441 Fax: 843-805-4040 |
Todd P Joye, MD Pain Medicine - Interventional Pain Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 125 Doughty St, Ste 420, Charleston, SC 29403 Phone: 843-723-3441 Fax: 843-805-4040 |
News Archive
Women who have had two or more induced abortions have a reduced risk of pre-eclampsia by 60 %.
Politico has a compilation of comments by Washington officials on the Sunday morning talk shows, including discussions about the health care overhaul legislation, which is facing a serious challenge following the election last Tuesday of Republican Scott Brown to the Senate seat of the late Sen. Edward Kennedy.
Engineers at the University of California, San Diego, are proposing a new surgical intervention for children born with a single ventricle in their heart-instead of the usual two. The new approach would potentially reduce the number of surgeries the patients have to undergo in the first six months of life from two to just one. If successful, it would also create a more stable circuit for blood to flow from the heart to the lungs and the rest of the body within the first days and months of life.
"The AMA welcomes bipartisan House passage of legislation to stop the Medicare physician payment cut for one year. Stopping the steep 25 percent Medicare cut for one year was vital to preserve seniors' access to physician care in 2011. Many physicians made clear that this year's roller coaster ride, caused by five delays of this year's cut, forced them to make difficult practice changes like limiting the number of Medicare patients they could treat.
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