Mary Eva Ostaszewski, FNP-C Registered Nurse Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4720 Nelson Brogdon Blvd, Sugar Hill, GA 30518 Phone: 770-945-1990 |
Dong Mi Shon, Registered Nurse Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6001 Cumming Hwy, Sugar Hill, GA 30518 Phone: 678-546-2148 |
Uche Osakwe, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5588 Creek Indian Dr, Sugar Hill, GA 30518 Phone: 747-226-8068 |
Ms. Avril Janis Angela Brown, R.N. Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6401 Sweet Laurel Run, Sugar Hill, GA 30518 Phone: 678-983-1890 |
News Archive
Determining how the law will be applied will be the next big battle in health reform and lobbyists are gearing up to influence implementation. "Congress gave sweeping power to federal agencies, especially (HHS), to fill in gaps lawmakers left in the 906-page legislation — an effort that will take years. The law refers more than 1,000 times to Cabinet secretaries who will make decisions on how to carry out the law. For example, the law requires insurance companies to spend 80% of premiums on medical claims, as opposed to administrative costs, by 2011. But it directs the health department to decide whether gray-area expenses, such as health-and-wellness programs offered by insurers, count as care or overhead."
By investigating a single molecule that influences cell growth, a research group in the Purdue Cancer Center, including Brian S. Henriksen, has gained new insight into the chain of events that make some cancer cells divide uncontrollably, insight that may eventually lead to a way to break that chain, stopping cancer in its tracks. The molecule, known as Icmt, has a critical role in the development of Ras, an ordinarily beneficial protein that tells a cell to divide. The research group has determined how to inhibit Icmt's influence on Ras, without which the protein cannot develop effectively into an instigator of cell growth.
The University of Kansas School of Medicine-Salina opened in 2011 — a one-building campus in the heart of wheat country dedicated to producing the rural doctors the country needs.
The rhythm of life may beat far deeper than anyone previously thought. And it may gyrate and pulse in a way that rivals the sensuous choreography of "Dirty Dancing."
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