Dr. Marion Garrett Parke, DPM Podiatrist - Public Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 599 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Suite 207, Greenbrae, CA 94904 Phone: 415-461-6555 |
Dr. Stephen John Wagstaff, D.P.M. Podiatrist - Sports Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1321 South Eliseo Drive, Greenbrae, CA 94904 Phone: 415-925-1150 Fax: 415-925-1154 |
Dr. Anthony James Fedrigo, DPM Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 599 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Suite 207, Greenbrae, CA 94904 Phone: 415-461-6555 Fax: 415-461-6556 |
News Archive
The Guardian reports, as part of an online feature about health care workforces worldwide done in association with the Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA), that "Africa is desperately short of doctors and nurses. So is much of Asia. In 57 countries, the situation is deemed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) to be at crisis point ... But in contrast to some other developing world problems, this is an issue that really does affect all of us. The world needs an estimated 4.2 million more health workers."
Allos Therapeutics, Inc. today announced the launch of an international registry designed to address the urgent need to better understand treatment patterns and outcomes for patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL). The registry, known as COMPLETE (Comprehensive Oncology Measures for Peripheral T-cell Lymphoma Treatment), is a global observational study that will enroll patients with newly-diagnosed PTCL and obtain data regarding longitudinal treatment patterns and outcomes.
Childhood obesity in the United States has more than tripled in the past three decades, and prior research has linked maternal employment to children's body mass index (BMI), a measure of their weight-for-height. A new study in the January/February issue of the journal Child Development has found that children's BMI rose the more years their mothers worked over their children's lifetimes.
A new study suggests the reasons for disparities in obesity rates between African-American and white women are far more complex than the usual go-to culprits of socioeconomics, fruit and vegetable intake, and exercise.
A study published in today's New England Journal of Medicine reports that the antibiotic dalbavancin is as effective as vancomycin, the current standard-of-care antibiotic used to treat serious bacterial skin and skin-structure infections.
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