Dr. Sunil Rameshbhai Patel, MD Pediatrics - Pediatric Cardiology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 N Front St, Pediatric Cardiology, Wormleysburg, PA 17043 Phone: 717-761-0200 Fax: 717-761-0641 |
Dr. Adam M Seitz, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1000 North Front Street, Suite 290 Pediatric Cardiology, Wormleysburg, PA 17043 Phone: 717-761-0200 Fax: 717-761-0641 |
Dr. Michael W Consevage, M.D. Pediatrics - Pediatric Cardiology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1000 N Front St, Pediatric Cardiology, Wormleysburg, PA 17043 Phone: 717-761-0200 Fax: 717-761-0641 |
Dr. Shaji C Menon, MD Pediatrics Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 North Front Street, Suite 290 Pediatric Cardiology, Wormleysburg, PA 17043 Phone: 717-761-0200 Fax: 717-761-0641 |
Dr. Christopher H Zachary, MD Pediatrics - Pediatric Cardiology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1000 N Front St, Wormleysburg, PA 17043 Phone: 717-761-0200 Fax: 717-761-0641 |
News Archive
An emerging technique designed to quickly distinguish between people with active and dormant tuberculosis may help health professionals diagnose the disease sooner, thereby potentially limiting early exposure to the disease, according to a study conducted by researchers at Duke University Medical Center.
Brain injury researchers at the University of Kentucky have spent hundreds of hours watching YouTube videos of people getting smacked, punched and knocked in the head during sporting events and recreational activities. But those researchers weren't goofing off on the Internet; they were doing hard science.
Scientists discovered a new way breast cancer cells dodge the immune system and promote tumor growth, providing a fresh treatment target in the fight against the disease. While comparable mechanisms to avoid the immune system have been identified in mice with breast and other cancers, the study tested human breast tumor cells, putting researchers closer to understanding how the disease progresses in real patients.
But on Capitol Hill, Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif., released a fact sheet detailing the profits earned by the nation's five largest insurers — including Humana — and touted health law provisions that would increase transparency from the insurance industry.
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, National Jewish Health and Centro de Neumología Pediátrica in Puerto Rico have been awarded nearly $10 million as part of a 5-year grant from the U.S. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, to address the root causes of asthma by studying 4,000 children in Puerto Rico, where asthma prevalence and deaths are among the highest in the world.
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