Concentra Health Care, Pa Clinic/Center Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 Putnam Pike, Suite E, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-232-7001 Fax: 401-232-7388 |
Concentra Primary Care Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 Putnam Pike, Suite E, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-232-7001 |
Twin Rivers Hearing Health Inc Clinic/Center Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 151 Douglas Pike, #1, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-349-0456 |
Ppc, Inc. Internal Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 910 Douglas Pike, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-459-6059 Fax: 401-427-6778 |
Smithfield Primary Care Llc. General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 41 Sanderson Rd, Suite 206, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-349-2203 Fax: 401-349-2408 |
Vmd Primary Providers Of Rhode Island Pc Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 Putnam Pike, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-757-6160 Fax: 401-349-0840 |
Concentra Urgent Care Clinic/Center Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 Putnam Pike, Suite E, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-232-7001 |
Concentra Urgent Care Clinic/Center Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 Putnam Pike, Suite E, Smithfield, RI 02917 Phone: 401-232-7001 |
News Archive
Researchers at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute have identified a heart-specific form of a protein, BIN1, responsible for sculpting tiny folds in pockets that are present on the surface of heart muscle cells.
A team of NIBIB-supported bioengineers, aerospace scientists, and cardiovascular clinicians are improving the function of the thousands of life-saving ventricular assist devices (VADs) implanted in advanced heart failure patients each year.
A variety of factors including questions about risk and reluctance to offend patients limits clinician willingness to prescribe a potentially life-saving medication that counteracts the effects of an opioid overdose, according to a Kaiser Permanente Colorado study published today in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Health experts come together today (Thursday) to warn that a new form of superbug that gives bacteria the power to resist virtually all known antibiotics is spreading quickly, posing a global health disaster. It is called New Delhi metallobeta-lactamase, or NDM-1 for short. This enzyme destroys carbapenems, an important group of antibiotics used for difficult infections in hospitals, and has been found in a wide variety of bacterial types. British researchers last August reported that infections involving NDM-1 had been found in patients in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Britain.
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