Julie Ferland, DPM Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3505 Lake City Hwy, Warsaw, IN 46580 Phone: 574-269-4144 |
Mr. Sean Michael Rhodes, DPM Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2280 Provident Ct Ste B, Warsaw, IN 46580 Phone: 574-269-9200 Fax: 574-269-9658 |
Warsaw Foot And Ankle Center Pc Podiatrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2280 Provident Ct Ste B, Warsaw, IN 46580 Phone: 574-269-9200 Fax: 574-269-9658 |
News Archive
"An outbreak of dengue fever in Mandera, northeastern Kenya, is spreading fast, with at least 5,000 people infected within weeks, due to limited health facilities, a shortage of medical personnel and poor sanitation, officials told IRIN."
A long-running study which ha been following up people into their seventies concludes that high blood pressure between the age of 36 and 53 years is associated with brain pathology such as white matter lesions and brain shrinkage in later life. To prevent this, blood pressure should be monitored beginning at or before 40 years, suggest the researchers.
The most effective, life-saving treatment for a severe allergic reaction is epinephrine. Yet a new study shows in an emergency, 52 percent of adults with potentially life-threatening allergies didn't use the epinephrine auto-injectors they were prescribed.
CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, the largest insurer in the Maryland, Washington and Northern Virginia market, will begin offering financial rewards to physicians who improve quality while cutting costs. Beginning on Jan. 1, the insurer plans to recruit doctors "to participate in its new initiative designed to cut down on the number of unnecessary diagnostic tests, emergency room visits and hospital re-admissions. To do so, CareFirst is putting the onus on the 5,000 doctors already in its network to revamp the care provided to their patients — particularly those with chronic diseases or at risk of contracting them — and more carefully consider where they send patients when they need to see a specialist or go to the hospital."
An experimental drug has blocked the progression of prostate cancer in an animal model with an aggressive form of the disease, new research shows.
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