Dr. Lisa E Heuer, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 99 Main St Ste 221, Nyack, NY 10960 Phone: 914-714-8957 |
Robert Sheldon Epstein, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 75 Tweed Blvd, Nyack, NY 10960 Phone: 845-680-0461 |
Dr. Isadora Guggenheim, FNP Preventive Medicine - Preventive Medicine/Occupational Environmental Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 8 Rockland Place, Nyack, NY 10960 Phone: 845-893-2608 Fax: 845-358-2963 |
News Archive
States around the country are taking advantage of a once little-used policy that allows them to bill Medicaid for the healthcare expenses of prisoners who leave a correctional institution for treatment. Since 1997, states have been allowed to bill Medicaid for the care of inmates who required treatment at a hospital or nursing facility for longer than 24 hours. The provision has drawn new attention this year as millions of Americans, including those serving time in correctional institutions, have become newly eligible for Medicaid under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Dickson, 9/23).
Although the last two decades have seen an increase in awareness and the prevalence of autism spectrum disorder, policy and practice to meet the needs of this group have not consistently kept pace. To combat part of this problem, the International Society for Autism Research has awarded a competitive grant to local leaders who are working to improve interactions between autistic individuals and the justice system.
Researchers at the University of Virginia Cancer Center have identified a promising target for treating glioblastoma, one that appears to avoid many of the obstacles that typically frustrate efforts to develop effective treatments for this deadliest of cancers.
When babies are born prematurely, they are thrust into a hospital environment that while highly successful at saving their lives, is not exactly the same as the mother's womb where ideal development occurs. The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) is equipped with highly skilled care givers and incubators that regulate temperature and humidity, but Amir Lahav, ScD, PhD, director of the Neonatal Research Lab at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) thought that something was missing - simulation of the maternal sounds that a baby would hear in the womb.
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