Blue River Family Medicine - Medicare Primary Care in Manhattan, KS

Blue River Family Medicine is a medicare enrolled primary clinic (Family Medicine) in Manhattan, Kansas. The current practice location for Blue River Family Medicine is 8301 Positano Dr, Manhattan, Kansas. For appointments, you can reach them via phone at (785) 587-0570. The mailing address for Blue River Family Medicine is 1829 College Ave, Manhattan, Kansas and phone number is (785) 776-5100.

Blue River Family Medicine is licensed to practice in Kansas (license number H075004). The clinic also participates in the medicare program and its NPI number is 1912495896. This medical practice accepts medicare insurance (which means this clinic accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance). However, please confirm if they accept your insurance at (785) 587-0570.

Contact Information

Blue River Family Medicine
8301 Positano Dr
Manhattan
KS 66502-4861
(785) 587-0570
(785) 587-0558

Primary Care Clinic Profile

Full NameBlue River Family Medicine
SpecialityFamily Medicine
Location8301 Positano Dr, Manhattan, Kansas
Authorized Official Name and PositionMelissa Westcott (CEO)
Authorized Official Contact7857762584
Accepts Medicare InsuranceYes. This clinic participates in medicare program and accept medicare insurance.

Mailing Address and Practice Location

Mailing AddressPractice Location Address
Blue River Family Medicine
1829 College Ave
Manhattan
KS 66502-3381

Ph: (785) 776-5100
Blue River Family Medicine
8301 Positano Dr
Manhattan
KS 66502-4861

Ph: (785) 587-0570

NPI Details:

NPI Number1912495896
Provider Enumeration Date04/26/2018
Last Update Date08/17/2023

Medicare PECOS Information:

Medicare PECOS PAC ID4981516739
Medicare Enrollment IDO20180813000794

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Medical Identifiers

Medical identifiers for Blue River Family Medicine such as npi, medicare ID, medicare PIN, medicaid, etc.
IdentifierTypeStateIssuer
1912495896NPI-NPPES

Medical Taxonomies and Licenses

TaxonomyTypeLicense (State)Status
207Q00000XFamily Medicine H075004 (Kansas)Primary

Medicare Reassignments

Some practitioners may not bill the customers directly but medicare billing happens through clinics / group practice / hospitals where the provider works. Blue River Family Medicine acts as a billing entity for following providers:
Provider NameKaren Way Graves
Provider TypePractitioner - Family Practice
Provider IdentifiersNPI Number: 1649236373
PECOS PAC ID: 5496720658
Enrollment ID: I20040831000927

News Archive

Seizures are common but not clinically apparent in newborns after cardiac surgery

In 2011, the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society issued a guideline recommending that neonates undergoing cardiac surgery for repair of congenital heart disease be placed on continuous encephalographic (EEG) monitoring after surgery to detect seizures. These recommendations followed reports that seizures are common in this population, may not be detected clinically, and are associated with adverse neurocognitive outcomes.

Study helps explain why leukemia occurs more frequently as people age

Hundreds of mutations exist in leukemia cells at the time of diagnosis, but nearly all occur randomly as a part of normal aging and are not related to cancer, new research shows.

Contemporary dataset reveals burden of paediatric pneumococcal disease

Children with chronic or immunocompromising medical conditions continue to be at increased risk for developing pneumococcal disease in the current era of universal immunisation, US researchers report.

VOA examines implications of sequestration on U.S. military malaria vaccine research

VOA News examines the implications of sequestration on the U.S. military's infectious disease research, noting "officials say the mandatory budget cuts ... will affect further testing of a potentially cutting-edge malaria vaccine, soon to be published."

Read more Medical News

› Verified 3 days ago

Provider NameSteffen Shamburg
Provider TypePractitioner - Family Practice
Provider IdentifiersNPI Number: 1649362153
PECOS PAC ID: 8628170792
Enrollment ID: I20070220000188

News Archive

Seizures are common but not clinically apparent in newborns after cardiac surgery

In 2011, the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society issued a guideline recommending that neonates undergoing cardiac surgery for repair of congenital heart disease be placed on continuous encephalographic (EEG) monitoring after surgery to detect seizures. These recommendations followed reports that seizures are common in this population, may not be detected clinically, and are associated with adverse neurocognitive outcomes.

Study helps explain why leukemia occurs more frequently as people age

Hundreds of mutations exist in leukemia cells at the time of diagnosis, but nearly all occur randomly as a part of normal aging and are not related to cancer, new research shows.

Contemporary dataset reveals burden of paediatric pneumococcal disease

Children with chronic or immunocompromising medical conditions continue to be at increased risk for developing pneumococcal disease in the current era of universal immunisation, US researchers report.

VOA examines implications of sequestration on U.S. military malaria vaccine research

VOA News examines the implications of sequestration on the U.S. military's infectious disease research, noting "officials say the mandatory budget cuts ... will affect further testing of a potentially cutting-edge malaria vaccine, soon to be published."

Read more Medical News

› Verified 3 days ago

Provider NameSamantha L Davis
Provider TypePractitioner - Nurse Practitioner
Provider IdentifiersNPI Number: 1548911605
PECOS PAC ID: 2961895198
Enrollment ID: I20220210000262

News Archive

Seizures are common but not clinically apparent in newborns after cardiac surgery

In 2011, the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society issued a guideline recommending that neonates undergoing cardiac surgery for repair of congenital heart disease be placed on continuous encephalographic (EEG) monitoring after surgery to detect seizures. These recommendations followed reports that seizures are common in this population, may not be detected clinically, and are associated with adverse neurocognitive outcomes.

Study helps explain why leukemia occurs more frequently as people age

Hundreds of mutations exist in leukemia cells at the time of diagnosis, but nearly all occur randomly as a part of normal aging and are not related to cancer, new research shows.

Contemporary dataset reveals burden of paediatric pneumococcal disease

Children with chronic or immunocompromising medical conditions continue to be at increased risk for developing pneumococcal disease in the current era of universal immunisation, US researchers report.

VOA examines implications of sequestration on U.S. military malaria vaccine research

VOA News examines the implications of sequestration on the U.S. military's infectious disease research, noting "officials say the mandatory budget cuts ... will affect further testing of a potentially cutting-edge malaria vaccine, soon to be published."

Read more Medical News

› Verified 3 days ago

News Archive

Seizures are common but not clinically apparent in newborns after cardiac surgery

In 2011, the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society issued a guideline recommending that neonates undergoing cardiac surgery for repair of congenital heart disease be placed on continuous encephalographic (EEG) monitoring after surgery to detect seizures. These recommendations followed reports that seizures are common in this population, may not be detected clinically, and are associated with adverse neurocognitive outcomes.

Study helps explain why leukemia occurs more frequently as people age

Hundreds of mutations exist in leukemia cells at the time of diagnosis, but nearly all occur randomly as a part of normal aging and are not related to cancer, new research shows.

Contemporary dataset reveals burden of paediatric pneumococcal disease

Children with chronic or immunocompromising medical conditions continue to be at increased risk for developing pneumococcal disease in the current era of universal immunisation, US researchers report.

VOA examines implications of sequestration on U.S. military malaria vaccine research

VOA News examines the implications of sequestration on the U.S. military's infectious disease research, noting "officials say the mandatory budget cuts ... will affect further testing of a potentially cutting-edge malaria vaccine, soon to be published."

Read more News

› Verified 3 days ago


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