Ms. Lisa Michellemojezati Platon, P.A. Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 3800 Main St Ste 100, The Colony, TX 75056 Phone: 972-887-7779 Fax: 972-688-6191 |
Jennifer Knickerbocker Lopez, PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5702 Saintsbury Dr Apt 123, The Colony, TX 75056 Phone: 316-558-2341 |
Jenny T. Smith, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6053 Main St Ste 110, The Colony, TX 75056 Phone: 972-872-8865 |
Payton Smith, Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5236 Hendrix Dr, The Colony, TX 75056 Phone: 214-412-8615 |
News Archive
The Joint Center for Cancer Precision Medicine, a collaborative initiative among Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston Children's Hospital, and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, has been established to create "precision medicine treatment pathways" for patients with advanced cancers and to speed the development of personalized therapies.
Many people are afflicted with rare illnesses of unknown cause, and finding a common link to such under-studied or "orphaned" diseases as Bardet-Biedl, Alstrom and Meckel-Gruber syndromes can significantly advance the search for causes and treatment.
Meat manufacturer Cargill Inc. is recalling nearly 36 million pounds of ground turkey linked to a California death and at least 78 other salmonella illnesses nationwide, company officials said. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced the Class I recall, with the highest health risk, late Wednesday. All of the recalled products were produced at the company's Springdale, Ark., plant.
A team of scientists at Johns Hopkins and in Texas has identified a handful of genetic mutations in black Americans, in addition to some chemical alterations affecting gene activity, which may help explain why the death rate among African-Americans from the most common form of head and neck cancer continues to hover some 18 percent higher above the death rate of whites with the same cancer.
Cranberry juice, long considered a home remedy for urinary tract infections, may also be effective against a number of gastrointestinal viruses according to researchers from St. Francis College in Brooklyn, New York. They report their findings today at the 105th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
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