Angie Paik, Plastic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 330 Cedar St # Bb330, New Haven, CT 06510 Phone: 203-785-2772 |
Dr. Bohdan Pomahac, MD Plastic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 Church St S Ste A220, New Haven, CT 06519 Phone: 203-785-5966 |
Dr. James Clune, M.D. Plastic Surgery - Surgery of the Hand Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 330 Cedar St, Boardman Bldg 3rd Floor, New Haven, CT 06510 Phone: 203-785-2571 |
Stephanie Lynn Kwei, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 800 Howard Ave, 4th Floor, New Haven, CT 06519 Phone: 203-785-2286 |
Mark H. Weinstein, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 136 Sherman Ave, #407, New Haven, CT 06511 Phone: 203-624-0673 |
Nayif M Alnaif, M.B.B.S. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 330 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06510 Phone: 203-785-2571 |
Siba Haykal, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 800 Howard Ave, New Haven, CT 06519 Phone: 203-785-2570 Fax: 032-785-5714 |
Dr. Deborah Pan, M.D. Plastic Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1 Audubon St, Suite 201, New Haven, CT 06511 Phone: 203-562-7662 Fax: 203-562-7663 |
Dr. Elspeth Jane Rose Hill, MD Plastic Surgery - Surgery of the Hand Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 20 York St, New Haven, CT 06510 Phone: 203-688-4242 |
Michael Alperovich, MD Plastic Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 330 Cedar St, 3rd Floor Boardman Building, New Haven, CT 06510 Phone: 203-366-2662 |
News Archive
Activant Solutions Inc., a leading provider of retail and distribution business management solutions, today announced that Lifechek Drug Inc. has selected the Activant EagleĀ® software platform to be its business management and Point-of-Sale (POS) solution. Lifechek executives selected the Activant Eagle solution as part of a greater effort to improve and expand its front store retail business.
A new study suggests that acute leukemia patients whose cancer cells show a genetic change that usually predicts a swift return of the disease following remission may remain disease-free longer when given aggressive therapy.
Too much antibiotic can decimate the normal intestinal microbiota, which may never recover its former diversity. That, in turn, renders the GI tract vulnerable to being colonized by pathogens. Now researchers from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, and Centro Superior de Investigaci-n en Salud P-blica, Valencia, Spain, show that reintroducing normal microbial diversity largely eliminated vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) from the intestinal tracts of mice..
In a recent groundbreaking bioRxiv paper, Chinese researchers describe a novel approach towards coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine design based on engineered human mesenchymal stem cells, with favorable and promising antibody response.
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