Debra Carol Zimring, M.D. Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1240 New Scotland Rd Ste 203, Slingerlands, NY 12159 Phone: 518-439-2460 Fax: 518-439-3025 |
Steven L. Bratman, M.D. Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 34 Olympian Dr, Slingerlands, NY 12159 Phone: 970-218-9879 |
Dr. F. Bruce Coles, D.O. Preventive Medicine - Public Health & General Preventive Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 13 S Helderberg Pkwy, Slingerlands, NY 12159 Phone: 518-439-3922 |
News Archive
University of Kentucky College of Medicine researcher Sidney Whiteheart has been awarded a prestigious Outstanding Investigator Award from the National Heart, Blood and Lung Institute for his research on how platelets function in hemostasis and during immune responses.
The numbers, posted daily on the Cook County sheriff's website, would be alarming at an urgent care clinic, let alone a jail: On a Wednesday, 36 percent of all new arrivals report having a mental illness. On a Friday, it's 54 percent. But inside the razor wire framing the 96-acre compound, the faces and voices of the newly arrested confirm its accidental role as Chicago's treatment center of last resort for people with serious mental illnesses (Geller, 7/14).
A new anti-inflammatory drug used by patients with type 2 diabetes improved their kidney function during a year-long study involving researchers from UT Southwestern Medical Center.
The Illinois Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a medical malpractice law enacted in 2005 that limited monetary damages to $1 million from hospitals and $500,000 from doctors for pain and suffering, the Chicago Tribune reports. "The much-anticipated ruling deals a blow to doctors and hospital officials who say caps on damages are a way to tame rising health care costs. … The court said the law violates the state's separation-of-powers clause between the branches of government by allowing lawmakers to interfere with a jury's right to determine damages."
Conventional wisdom among scientists for years has suggested that because individuals with Down syndrome have an extra chromosome, the disorder most likely results from the presence of too many genes or proteins contained in that additional structure.
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