Sanders Podiatry Llc Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2830 10th St, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-524-0122 |
Dr. Brian Sanders, DPM Podiatrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2830 10th St, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-524-0122 Fax: 541-524-2120 |
Michael James Rushton, DPM Podiatrist - Foot & Ankle Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2830 10th St, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-524-0122 Fax: 541-524-2120 |
Rushton Podiatry Pc Podiatrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2830 10th Street, Baker City, OR 97814 Phone: 541-524-0122 Fax: 541-524-2120 |
News Archive
A new study shows that a radioactive skin patch can safely and successfully treat basal cell carcinoma, one of the most common types of skin cancers, according to researchers at the SNM's 56th Annual Meeting. The skin patch, which delivers the radioactive phosphorus-32, is nontoxic and could be an excellent alternative to surgery or radiotherapy in cases where carrying out these treatments is difficult.
Businesses won't be penalized next year if they don't provide workers health insurance after the Obama administration decided to delay a key requirement under its health-care law, two administration officials said. The decision will come in regulatory guidance to be issued later this week. It addresses vehement complaints from employer groups about the administrative burden of reporting requirements, though it may also affect coverage provided to some workers (Dorning and Wayne, 7/2).
Cedars-Sinai regenerative medicine investigators have received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to test a combination stem cell-gene therapy they developed to stall the progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a neurological disease that causes progressive paralysis and ultimately death.
A biomedical engineer researcher at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis has received a $419,000 National Institutes of Health grant to uncover why mechanical loading of bones increases their resistance to fractures.
A rare Patagonian rodent known as the colonial tuco-tuco fascinates biologists because it seems to defy all odds. This threatened species has so little genetic diversity that the slightest whiff of climate change or disease should have wiped it off the face of the earth long ago. Yet the hearty gopher-like creature has not only managed to survive for thousands of years in the harsh climate of the Argentine highlands, it has evolved a complex social structure that's unique among the more than 50 closely related tuco-tuco species.
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