Dr. Cynthia Merle Lipsitz, MD MPH Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7178 Columbia Gateway Dr, Columbia, MD 21046 Phone: 410-313-6109 Fax: 410-313-6108 |
Ghazala Afaq Kazi, M.D., M.P.H. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6656 Dobbin Rd, Columbia, MD 21045 Phone: 410-381-1330 Fax: 410-381-5585 |
Dr. Peter Lowell Beilenson, MD, MPH Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7178 Columbia Gateway Dr, Howard County Health Department, Columbia, MD 21046 Phone: 410-313-6363 Fax: 410-313-6303 |
News Archive
High-fat feeding can cause impairments in the functioning of the mesolimbic dopamine system, says Stephanie Fulton of the University of Montreal and the CHUM Research Centre. This system is a critical brain pathway controlling motivation. Fulton's findings, published today in Neuropsychopharmacology, may have great health implications.
A study exploring the healing of diabetic skin ulcers using topical oxygen/ozone gas mixtures could not proceed to completion and was now abandoned, according to Ozonics International, LLC, a veteran-owned biotechnology company engaged in the research and development of ozone-based medical therapies.
A new study has shown that the rate of "pack-a-day" or more smokers in the United States has fallen sharply since 1965, particularly in California. There is evidence from earlier literature that a smaller percentage of Americans smoke now than in previous decades. This new study was published online in the Journal of the American Medical Association. It shows that high-intensity smoking is also less common.
Physicians and health care officials on Wednesday called on Nevada lawmakers to support a bill ( SB 266) that would guarantee all pregnant women in the state have access to an HIV test as part of routine prenatal care, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reports.
An international team of researchers, led by scientists at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, and the Eastern Hepatobiliary Surgery Hospital in China, say a human gene implicated in the development of leukemia also acts to prevent cancer of the liver.
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