Dr. Robert B Watterson, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 126 Market Way, Mount Pocono, PA 18344 Phone: 570-839-3633 Fax: 570-839-6490 |
Dr. Allyson C. Hardy, D.O. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 126 Market Way, Mount Pocono, PA 18344 Phone: 570-839-3633 Fax: 570-839-6490 |
Dr. Bret S. Yarczower, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 126 Market Way, Mount Pocono, PA 18344 Phone: 570-839-3633 Fax: 570-839-6490 |
Dr. Quentin Thomas Novinger, M.D. Pediatrics Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 21 Commerce Court, Mount Pocono, PA 18344 Phone: 570-839-3633 Fax: 570-839-6490 |
News Archive
In a recent study from the Ohio State University Medical Center, 62.2 percent of those surveyed turned to alternative therapies before turning to more invasive medical treatments for infertility and getting pregnant.
Young men being treated for HIV are more likely to experience low bone mass than are other men their age, according to results from a research network supported by the National Institutes of Health. The findings indicate that physicians who care for these patients should monitor them regularly for signs of bone thinning, which could foretell a risk for fractures. The young men in the study did not have HIV at birth and had been diagnosed with HIV an average of two years earlier.
A team of physicians, engineers and materials scientists at Children's Hospital Boston and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have used nanotechnology and tiny gold wires to engineer cardiac patches, with cells all beating in time, that could someday help heart attack patients.
Variation in consumption of market-acquired foods outside of the traditional diet - but not in total calories burned daily - is reliably related to indigenous Amazonian children's body fat, according to a Baylor University study that offers insight into the global obesity epidemic.
Long-acting reversible contraceptives like intrauterine implants have greatly reduced unintended pregnancies and abortions, but government protections allowing religious hospitals to restrict care are limiting access to health care consumers, according to an expert at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.
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