Dr. Maan Younes, M.D. Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3311 Prescott Rd, Ste 318, Alexandria, LA 71301 Phone: 318-449-8882 Fax: 318-449-5442 |
Benjamin F Walton Iii, M.D. Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 201 4th St Ste 1a, Alexandria, LA 71301 Phone: 318-769-5864 Fax: 318-769-3910 |
Juan Carlos Vega Soliven, MD Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3330 Masonic Dr, Christus Cabrini Group Practice Intensivists, Alexandria, LA 71301 Phone: 318-448-6700 Fax: 318-483-4066 |
Dr. Alexandre Leoni Slatkin, M.D. Internal Medicine - Pulmonary Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 201 4th St, Ste 5a, Alexandria, LA 71301 Phone: 318-448-1249 Fax: 318-448-9644 |
News Archive
Human Genome Sciences, Inc. today announced the results of its randomized Phase 2 trial of mapatumumab (HGS-ETR1) in combination with bortezomib (Velcade) in patients with advanced multiple myeloma.
As part of a groundbreaking global effort to test several million people for HIV in conjunction with this year's observation of World AIDS Day on Tuesday, December 1st, AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization, is spearheading and coordinating the ‘Testing Millions' campaign. The campaign, which has been organized by AHF in coalition with hundreds of global partners from 52 countries around the world, is mobilizing non-governmental organizations (NGOs), local and national governments, international relief agencies, faith-based organizations and civil society to participate.
Wounds suffered by patients with diabetes tend to heal poorly. For treatment to work, the patient's physician must discuss the situation with specialists and nursing staff to decide on the best approach. However, e-mailing the files containing the diagnosis and discussing them on the telephone is a time-consuming process.
In this post in USAID's "IMPACTblog," Chris Thomas, a health and development officer at USAID, reports on an event held on Capitol Hill on Tuesday during which "the U.S. Government celebrated remarkable country-level success in saving the lives of women during pregnancy and childbirth."
The risk of death following bone marrow transplantation can be reduced about 60 percent using a new technique to identify bone marrow donors who make the most potent cancer-fighting immune cells, according to research from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The findings appear in the September 16 online issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
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