Mrs. Brooke Amanda Johnston, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 950 Octorara Trail, Parkesburg, PA 19365 Phone: 610-857-6639 Fax: 484-334-7026 |
Hayley Rothstein, Physician Assistant Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 950 S Octorara Trl, Parkesburg, PA 19365 Phone: 610-857-6218 |
Julie Latshaw, Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 950 S Octorara Trl, Parkesburg, PA 19365 Phone: 610-857-6648 |
Gabriel Nathan Skolnick, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 950 S Octorara Trl, Parkesburg, PA 19365 Phone: 610-857-6639 |
Dustin Lee Yothers, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 950 S Octorara Trl, Parkesburg, PA 19365 Phone: 610-857-6639 Fax: 610-857-6649 |
Kristen D Mullen, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 950 S Octorara Trl, Parkesburg, PA 19365 Phone: 610-857-9948 |
News Archive
Cigarette smoking induced COPD, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, is a disease that results in severe breathing difficulty. According to World Health Organization (WHO) it is the fourth leading killer worldwide. However the mechanisms responsible for some smokers developing COPD and others evading the disease have not been well understood.
A simple three-factor tool can help doctors estimate survival time in patients with long bone metastases (LBMs)- advanced cancer that has spread to the bones of the limbs, reports a study in the February 7, 2018, issue of The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.
Patients undergoing colon and rectal operations who participated in an innovative quality improvement (QI) program to speed their recovery and enhance results experienced shorter hospitalizations, reduced infection rates, and lower hospital costs, according to new study results.
The first findings from a one-of-a-kind, patient-driven effort to provide lung tissue for research might help doctors predict when patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) are becoming dangerously ill and also could point the way to interventions that could sustain them until life-saving transplants can be performed.
A new study has found that some black women with advanced breast cancer declined treatment with chemotherapy or radiation, though researchers did not know the reason why so many of the women opted against treatment, HealthDay/Las Vegas NOW reports.
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