Carolina Arencibia, NP-C Registered Nurse Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 18 W Blackwell St, Dover, NJ 07801 Phone: 973-328-3344 |
Mr. Dumar Rivera-herrera, APN, CRNA Registered Nurse Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 25 Academy St, Dover, NJ 07801 Phone: 862-812-9020 |
Maria Teresa Morales, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 18 W Blackwell St, Dover, NJ 07801 Phone: 973-328-3344 |
Ms. Jenna T Devita, BSN, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 W Blackwell St, Dover, NJ 07801 Phone: 973-989-3000 |
Santina Motyka-little, APN Registered Nurse - Registered Nurse First Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6 Rockridge Ter, Dover, NJ 07801 Phone: 973-270-8455 Fax: 973-328-0120 |
News Archive
On Thursday, an international coalition of public health leaders including CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy Dean Ayman El-Mohandes and Senior Scholar Scott Ratzan issued a statement asserting its commitment to vaccine acceptance around the world and to eliminating vaccine-preventable diseases, including childhood diseases such as measles, mumps, and rubella.
Colchicine, a drug that's used to treat gout, has the beneficial side effect of lowering the risk of heart attack in patients taking it. Conversely, taxol, a drug for treating cancer, has the opposite effect; raising the risk of heart failure.
Acetylon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. today announced that it has been awarded two grants totaling $488,000 under the Qualifying Therapeutic Discovery Project (QTDP) program.
Despite promising signs of economic recovery, many employees feel undervalued and stressed out at work and many are dissatisfied with aspects of their job, according to a survey by the American Psychological Association.
A personality profile marked by overly gregarious yet anxious behavior is rooted in abnormal development of a circuit hub buried deep in the front center of the brain, say scientists at the National Institutes of Health. They used three different types of brain imaging to pinpoint the suspect brain area in people with Williams syndrome, a rare genetic disorder characterized by these behaviors.
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