Liliane K Yacoub, MD Pathology - Anatomic Pathology & Clinical Pathology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 70 East St, Attn Pathology Dept, Methuen, MA 01844 Phone: 978-687-0156 Fax: 978-691-5709 |
Johng Chun, MD Pathology - Anatomic Pathology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 70 East St, Methuen, MA 01844 Phone: 978-687-0151 |
Donald G Ross, MD Pathology - Anatomic Pathology & Clinical Pathology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 70 East St, Attn: Pathology Dept, Methuen, MA 01844 Phone: 978-687-0156 Fax: 978-691-5709 |
News Archive
IASIS Healthcare LLC today announced the completion of its acquisition of a 79% ownership interest in St. Joseph Medical Center a 792 licensed bed facility in downtown Houston, Texas.
Sunstone Capital has signed an investment agreement with IMIX, an end-user provider of superior digital radiography (DR) systems for hospitals and specialist clinics. Simultaneously IMIX and ARCOMA AB, a leading OEM supplier of medical and radiology systems and sub-systems, have signed a Letter of Intent to combine the activities of the two companies in a single holding company, IMIX Holding AB. The combined company will become a leading global supplier of radiographic solutions.
Samaritan Pharmaceuticals, a biopharmaceutical company committed to commercializing new innovative therapeutic drugs, has received notification that the claims in the patent application for "Neuroprotective Spirostenol Pharmaceutical Compositions" covering Caprospinol (SP-233) have been allowed by the Australian Patent Office.
In an attempt to help children with autism learn the building blocks of creativity, researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) tapped a toy box staple for help - legos. By building lego structures in new and unique ways, children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) learned to use creativity, an important skill that they had seen as very challenging prior to the study.
New research by UC San Francisco stem cell biologists has revealed that a DNA-binding protein called Foxd3 acts like a genetic traffic signal, holding that ball of undifferentiated cells in a state of readiness for its great transformation in the third week of development.
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