Rainer Wolf Bagdasarian, MD Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 25 Newell Rd, Suite D28, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-583-2003 Fax: 860-582-6255 |
Khaula Khatlani, M.D. Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 975 Farmington Ave Ste 1, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-589-0114 Fax: 860-589-1936 |
Kenneth George Benoit, MD Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 85 Beleden Gardens Drive, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-582-1220 Fax: 860-582-6255 |
James Thomas Sayre, MD Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 85 Beleden Gardens Dr, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-582-1220 Fax: 860-582-6255 |
Sai Varanasi, M.D. Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 41 Brewster Rd, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-585-3000 |
Daniel Joseph Scoppetta, MD Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 25 Newell Rd, Suite D28, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-582-1220 Fax: 860-582-6255 |
Ara D Bagdasarian, MD Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 25 Newell Rd, Ste D-21, Bristol, CT 06010 Phone: 860-583-2003 Fax: 860-583-1639 |
News Archive
A poll of Canadians conducted for the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) shows that most feel the steadily increasing cost of providing universal health care in Canada will handcuff governments' ability to provide services such as education, transportation and pension benefits.
The rapid development of nanotechnology has increased fears about the health risks of nano-objects. Are these fears justified? Do we need a new discipline, nanotoxicology, to evaluate the risks? Empa scientists Harald F. Krug and Peter Wick discuss these questions in the new edition of the journal Angewandte Chemie.
An international collaboration of scientists, including researchers at the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), a part of the National Institutes of Health, has identified a genetic mutation that causes a rare childhood disease characterized predominantly by inflammation and fat loss.
The Chinese Famine of 1959-61 has been widely interpreted as an important contributor to later epidemics of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitis, but in re-examining 17 related Chinese studies researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and Leiden University Medical Center, found little evidence for this association.
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