Dr. Chad Edward Connor, MD Pediatrics - Pediatric Cardiology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4881 Sugar Maple Dr, Pediatric Cardiology, Wright Patterson Afb, OH 45433 Phone: 937-522-4721 Fax: 937-656-3468 |
Dr. Paolo G Roncallo, MD Pediatrics - Adolescent Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4881 Sugar Maple Dr, Wright Patterson Medical Center, Wright Patterson Afb, OH 45433 Phone: 937-522-2917 |
Dr. Kara Jean Knickerbocker, D.O. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4881 Sugar Maple Dr, Wright Patterson Afb, OH 45433 Phone: 937-257-6991 |
Thomas Mark Bertagnoli, D.O. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4881 Sugar Maple Dr, Wright Patterson Afb, OH 45433 Phone: 937-257-9612 |
Dr. Brantly Baynes, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4881 Sugar Maple Dr, 88 Mdg/sgh2, Wright Patterson Afb, OH 45433 Phone: 937-257-9123 |
Jason T Forbush, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4881 Sugar Maple Dr Bldg 83088, Wright Patterson Afb, OH 45433 Phone: 937-257-0837 |
News Archive
IRX Therapeutics, a developer of novel immunomodulators to treat cancer and viral diseases, today announced that it has raised $8 million through a note offering to existing shareholders. The new funding will be used to further develop its pipeline of cancer vaccine candidates, including its lead product, IRX-2. IRX Therapeutics has now raised a total of more than $80 million in private financing.
Research has shown that patients from ethnic minority groups receive less analgesic-based pain treatment in emergency departments than whites, however, a study published in The Journal of Pain reports that nonwhite physicians achieve better pain control using less analgesia.
It's official, you can wear a bra without increasing your risk of developing breast cancer. Despite there being no scientifically valid data indicating that wearing a bra causes cancer, there have been widespread rumours to the contrary.
Fifty-two year-old Paul McNeel, a fire chief from Leonardtown, Maryland was 37 in 1996 when a sudden health problem caused the loss of his small intestine. Almost all of it had to be surgically removed to save his life. For 13 years after that, McNeel continued to fight fires and stayed alive only because he fed himself a special liquid formula through a tube that went from a port in his chest directly to his heart and into his bloodstream.
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