Ms. Alicia Marie Pointer, D.O. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 124 Main St, Goshen, NY 10924 Phone: 845-360-6603 |
James N. Wapshare, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2002 Route 17m, Suite 8, Goshen, NY 10924 Phone: 845-291-7059 Fax: 845-291-0905 |
Dr. Mohamed Sayed Mohamed Ali, MD Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 102 Clowes Ave, Goshen, NY 10924 Phone: 845-333-7200 |
Regina A. Gruber, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 888 Pulaski Hwy, Goshen, NY 10924 Phone: 845-651-2298 Fax: 845-651-2299 |
News Archive
Government subsidies persuade some people to change habits, but social shame works even better, suggests a recent study of efforts to reduce elevated childhood death and disease rates blamed on the microbial pathogens that cause diarrhea in rural India.
Genomic Health, Inc. today announced results from a study demonstrating the critical role of manual microdissection to remove all biopsy cavities from breast cancer specimens. Genomic Health's Oncotype DX is the only commercially available breast cancer test that employs manual microdissection following review by a board certified surgical pathologist with breast expertise to predict a patient's benefit from chemotherapy and risk of disease recurrence.
The state's teachers union, Wisconsinites learned, had used its power to collectively bargain for healthcare benefits to demand that local school districts provide coverage through a nonprofit insurer affiliated with the union. Once the state ended bargaining on healthcare, school boards began competitively bidding out their health insurance. By the opening of the new school year in September, just two months after the budget bill went into effect, 23 districts had rebid their contracts, saving $16 million, or an average of $211 per student.
Brain scans used to track changes in a dozen patients who received an experimental gene therapy show that the treatment normalizes brain function - and the effects are still present a year later.
Prisoners and detainees worldwide have higher burdens of HIV, viral hepatitis and tuberculosis than the communities from which they come, and the regular cycling of infected people in and out of incarceration is worsening the epidemics both inside and outside of prison, new Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health-led research suggests.
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