Dee Jay Beach, D.O. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 8515 Pearl St Ste 300, Thornton, CO 80229 Phone: 303-853-8989 |
Dr. Jeffrey E Hawke, MD Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9195 Grant St, Suite 100, Thornton, CO 80229 Phone: 303-292-0034 Fax: 303-292-0097 |
Dr. Ryan Jordan Otten, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 9195 Grant St Ste 100, Thornton, CO 80229 Phone: 303-292-0034 Fax: 303-292-0097 |
Dean L. Prok, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 500 E 84th Ave, Suite B-14, Thornton, CO 80229 Phone: 615-778-4066 Fax: 615-778-9114 |
News Archive
In our latest interview, we spoke to Dr. Sheng-Chia Chung about her latest research that investigated curbing COVID-19 transmission through border controls.
The global CT market is expected to grow 5.5 percent to $5.1 billion in 2018, according to a new Kalorama Information report. The combination of product enhancements and the need to cut radiation dose levels is fueling the market. A new federal standard passed into law last year, NEMA Standard XR-29, defining low dose standards and punishing providers not in compliance will help growth, according to the market research publisher.
A 20-year-old man from France fifteen years back met with a car accident and suffered damage to his brain putting him is a vegetative state or a state where from he never regained consciousness. Now he is 35 years and an experimental low-intensity nerve stimulation method has been found to stir him into a "minimally conscious state".
Nuesoft Technologies Inc. today announced the launch of its electronic health record (EHR). The NueMD® EHR 5.2 is certified for Ambulatory EHR 2007 by the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT®), and accompanies NueMD's medical practice management software solution to comprise NueMD® Complete, a fully integrated practice management and electronic medical record.
Why is it that Mycobacterium tuberculosis can cause tuberculosis with as little as 10 cells, whereas Vibrio cholerae requires the host to ingest up to tens of millions of cells to cause cholera? This is the question that two research teams, from the Pasteur Institute, in France, and the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia and the University of Lisbon, in Portugal, answer in the latest issue of the journal PLoS Pathogens.
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