Riverwoods Health And Wellness Center Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1105 Milwaukee Ave, Riverwoods, IL 60015 Phone: 847-325-5110 |
Tamid Medical Group Internal Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1105 Milwaukee Ave, Riverwoods, IL 60015 Phone: 847-325-5110 Fax: 847-325-5114 |
Lewis Barr, M.d.,s.c. Internal Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5 Columbine Ln, Riverwoods, IL 60015 Phone: 708-468-4070 |
News Archive
Grow it, try it, and you just might like it is a motto many schools are embracing to encourage children to eat more fruits and vegetables. Through community-based kitchen garden programs, particularly those with dedicated cooking components, schools are successfully introducing students to healthier foods. In a new study released in the March/April 2013 issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, researchers found that growing and then cooking the foods that kids grew increased their willingness to try new foods.
As the Earth's temperatures continue to rise, we can expect a significant change in infectious disease patterns around the globe.
Every protein-from albumin to testosterone-is folded into a unique, three-dimensional shape that allows it to function properly. Now Stanford University scientists have developed a simple test that instantly changes color when a protein molecule attached to a gold nanoparticle folds or unfolds.
A new study published in the British Medical Journal December 2019 suggests a novel risk factor for heart disease – the season in which the individual is born. The large study carried out in the US shows that people born in either spring or summer had a significant, though slight, increase in the risk of fatal heart disease, when compared to the autumn-born. Why this should be so is unknown as of now.
Fisher Wallace Laboratories today announced the results of a brain stimulation study involving the Fisher Wallace Cranial Stimulator, a portable medical device that treats depression, anxiety and insomnia. The study, published in The Neuroscientist and authored by Dr. Felipe Fregni, assistant professor in neurology at Harvard Medical School, analyzes a decade's worth of research on the brain stimulation technology used by the Fisher Wallace Cranial Stimulator.
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