Dr. Richard E. Nilson, MD Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 12 Union St, Rockland, ME 04841 Phone: 207-701-4400 Fax: 207-701-4487 |
James Richard Young, M.D. Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 12 Union St, Rockland, ME 04841 Phone: 207-338-2295 Fax: 207-338-2388 |
Dr. Harold Williams Van Lonkhuyzen, MD Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 12 Union Street, Rockland, ME 04841 Phone: 207-701-4402 Fax: 207-701-4486 |
Anne Cohen, MD Psychiatry & Neurology - Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 12 Union St, Rockland, ME 04841 Phone: 207-701-4477 Fax: 207-701-4486 |
Dr. Susan H. Nilson, MD Psychiatry & Neurology - Psychiatry Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 12 Union St, Rockland, ME 04841 Phone: 207-701-4400 Fax: 207-701-4487 |
News Archive
Gout has been described by the Daily Mail as something, "usually associated with port-swilling, over-fed elderly men of the 19th century". (1) Recent research carried out at the Boston University School of Medicine, however, has found that the incidence of gout in the US is on the rise. (2) Thus, the condition is clearly not something that only affects this stereotype.
People with higher levels of the omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oil may also have larger brain volumes in old age equivalent to preserving one to two years of brain health, according to a study published in the January 22, 2014, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Shrinking brain volume is a sign of Alzheimer's disease as well as normal aging.
A new study shows that patients whose colorectal cancer has spread to the liver who received an approach called hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) - the administration of chemotherapy directly to the liver through a pump in the abdomen - fare better than those who received traditional, intravenous chemotherapy.
Far too many Americans still go without the best care. That's why the Obama administration has joined with Truman Medical Centers and more than 2,500 other hospitals nationwide, along with thousands of employers, health insurers, provider organizations and patient advocates, to launch the Partnership for Patients … Over the next three years, we will reduce preventable injuries in hospitals by 40 percent. And we will cut hospital re-admissions by 20 percent, targeting the return trips that should never have occurred.
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