Jenny Lin, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 300 Corporate Blvd S, Yonkers, NY 10701 Phone: 914-294-6300 |
Dr. Zuheir Jamil Said, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 45 Ludlow St Fl 5, Yonkers, NY 10705 Phone: 914-613-4966 Fax: 914-613-4967 |
Kersha Pennicott, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 73 Market St, Yonkers, NY 10710 Phone: 914-607-4730 Fax: 914-607-4731 |
Keriann Lynn Potter, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 73 Market St, Yonkers, NY 10710 Phone: 914-305-2725 Fax: 914-607-6241 |
News Archive
A brief report in the February 28, 2008, New England Journal of Medicine, led by researchers at the New England Newborn Screening Program (NENSP) of the University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS), indicates a declining incidence of a genetic disease, providing what may be the first demonstration of a link between two independent population-based screening programs.
Health experts have been saying that mobile phones are bad for us for a long time. Now they are getting set to prove it beyond any doubt. Researchers in London recently launched the world's largest study on the safety of using mobile phones. A quarter of a million mobile phone users will be tracked through their medical records for more than 20 years. This is the largest study in the world on the health effects of using mobile phones and is being called Cosmos.
A new California law that reclassifies some independent contractors as employees, requiring they be offered a range of benefits and worker protections, will likely expand health insurance coverage in the state, health policy experts say.
Older patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and a history of heart disease face a high risk of hospitalization for cardiac complications after completing treatment, according to research published online today in Blood, the journal of the American Society of Hematology. HL is a form of cancer of arising in the lymph nodes, and approximately 8,500 people were diagnosed with the disease in 2009, according to the American Cancer Society.
Female promiscuity-something that occurs in a majority of species, including humans-results in the ejaculates from two or more males overlapping within her reproductive tract. When this happens, sperm compete for fertilization of the female's eggs. In addition, the female has the opportunity to bias fertilization of her eggs in favor of one male's sperm over others.
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