Mr. Peter M Lambert, MD Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd Ste 1, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-973-8198 Fax: 207-973-4293 |
Dr. Janeen Daniels, M.D. Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-973-4280 |
Julia Manzerova, M.D./PH.D. Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd Ste 1, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-973-4280 |
Dr. William Arthur Castrucci, MD Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-973-7499 Fax: 207-973-7630 |
Dr. Kurt Matthew Snyder, M.D. Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd, Suite 1, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-873-6034 Fax: 207-872-9136 |
Mr. Paul Conrad Szal, MD Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd Ste 1, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-973-8198 Fax: 207-973-7630 |
Mr. John Joseph Swalec, MD Radiology - Radiation Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33 Whiting Hill Rd Ste 1, Brewer, ME 04412 Phone: 207-973-7499 Fax: 207-973-4293 |
News Archive
Just as a new poll concludes that people with and without insurance disapprove of the health law at about the same rate, the Obama administration turns to its "top seller" to promote the overhaul.
Many of the newest weapons in the war on cancer come in the form of personalized therapies that can target specific changes in an individual's tumor. By disrupting molecular processes in tumor cells, these drugs can keep the tumor from growing and spreading. At the forefront of this work are Binghamton University researchers, Susan Bane, and Susannah Gal, who are deploying a new tool in their study of an enzyme called tubulin tyrosine ligase, or TTL.
Health care costs continue to go up, and physicians control more than 80 percent of those costs. Could providing physicians with real-time information about the cost of what they order help to restrain excessive testing? This is the question addressed in an article- in the Journal of General Internal Medicine-, published by Springer. The research project was led by Daniel Horn of the Massachusetts General Hospital's Division of General Medicine in the US, and is among the first to focus on the impact that the passive display of real-time laboratory costs can have within a primary care, non-academic setting.
An at-home olfactory test helps to identify people with an increased risk of having dopamine transporter imaging indicative of early Parkinson's disease, show data from the Parkinson Associated Risk Syndrome study.
Italian researchers have evaluated the risk of sexual transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among 895 monogamous heterosexual partners of HCV chronically infected individuals in a long-term prospective study.
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