Dr. Tatiana P. Nagibina, M.D. Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 32615 Us Highway 19 N, Suite 2, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-789-2784 Fax: 727-785-3537 |
Gina Raptoulis, D.O. Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 32615 Us 19 N, Suite 2, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-789-2784 Fax: 727-785-3537 |
Dr. Rohan Chawla, M.D. Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33920 Us Highway 19 N, Suite 241, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-773-9793 Fax: 727-773-0674 |
Dr. Anthony I Sebba, MD Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33920 Us Highway 19 North, Suite 241, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-773-9793 Fax: 727-773-0674 |
Dr. Ernst Markus Klaus, Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 32615 Us Highway 19 N Ste 2, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-789-2784 Fax: 727-785-3537 |
Anjali Shetty, Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33920 Us 19 N Ste 241, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-773-9793 Fax: 727-773-0674 |
Dr. Karen E Zagar, M.D. Internal Medicine - Rheumatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 32615 Us Highway 19 N, Suite 2, Palm Harbor, FL 34684 Phone: 727-789-2784 Fax: 727-785-3537 |
News Archive
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the nation's leading philanthropy on health and health care, has awarded Akilah Dulin Keita, Brown University Assistant Professor in the Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, a 24-month grant through the New Connections program.
Increasingly, doctors are treating lung cancer based on the genetic rearrangements driving the disease. For example, cancers that are driven by changes in the genes ALK, EGFR, and ROS1 can now all be paired with drugs that target these specific changes.
In the 26 states that expanded Medicaid eligibility by January 2014, federally qualified health centers observed reductions in uninsured patients and improvements in hypertension and glucose measurements, particularly among Black and Hispanic patients.
Scientists from Royal Holloway, University of London, will research the biology of human asthma by using a slime mould, an organism which has no lungs but could hold the key to new treatments.
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