Mr. Salman S Sheikh, MD Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2121 E Pecos Rd Ste 3, Chandler, AZ 85225 Phone: 480-325-8173 |
Dr. Thomas Ardiles, MD Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1955 W Frye Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-728-3000 Fax: 602-230-6461 |
Muhammad M Salim, MD Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 255 S Dobson Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-821-0129 Fax: 480-821-0193 |
Dr. Daniel A Belen, DO Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 W Frye Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-728-3000 Fax: 602-230-6461 |
Cameron Mclaughlin, D.O. Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 W Frye Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-909-3870 |
Loreto Sulit, MD Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 W Frye Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-909-3870 |
Dr. Gary Thomas Nagamoto, M.D. Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 W Frye Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-728-3000 Fax: 602-230-6461 |
Yu Ya Huang, M. D. Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 W Frye Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224 Phone: 480-909-3870 |
News Archive
A study led by the University of Kent's Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology (DICE) has found significant differences in disease risk perception and channels of information about Ebola virus disease (EVD) in rural areas and urban centers of Guinea, West Africa.
"[T]his month the World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva, Switzerland, proposed a shift in [polio] vaccination strategy from oral vaccines to injected ones that may have to be administered in clinics," Nature reports, adding, "The change is needed to mop up the last remaining pockets of polio, but experts say that it poses challenges in [rural areas], which have poor access to health care."
No one knows for sure how they got there. But the discovery that bacteria that normally live in the gut can be detected in the lungs of critically ill people and animals could mean a lot for intensive care patients.
Science Translational Medicine on Wednesday published a commentary "authored by Harold Varmus, Nobel prize-winning director of the National Cancer Institute in the U.S., and by Harpal Kumar, CEO of Cancer Research U.K., on behalf of leading cancer research institutions from Australia to Argentina and Taiwan to Turkey," in which they describe a plan for addressing cancer in developed and developing countries, Guardian health editor Sarah Boseley reports in her "Global Health Blog."
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