Anthony Buglino, DO Surgery - Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 40 Crossways Park Dr Ste 108, Woodbury, NY 11797 Phone: 646-970-2743 |
Dr. Stephen Todd Greenberg, MD Surgery - Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 195 Froehlich Farm Blvd, Woodbury, NY 11797 Phone: 516-364-4200 Fax: 516-364-6562 |
Dr. Stephanie Anne Cooper, MD Surgery - Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 160 Crossways Park Drive, Woodbury, NY 11797 Phone: 516-364-4200 Fax: 516-590-0267 |
Titilayo Adegboyega, M.D. Surgery Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 321 Crossways Park Dr, Woodbury, NY 11797 Phone: 631-470-1450 Fax: 631-470-1451 |
News Archive
A new study by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center - Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute has identified a mechanism by which cancer cells develop resistance to a class of drugs called fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) inhibitors.
Stroke is a frequent and dreaded complication of atrial fibrillation. But predicting which of the estimated six million Americans with a-fib are at highest risk has long challenged physicians weighing stroke risk against the serious side effects posed by lifelong therapy with warfarin and other blood thinners.
The support provided for women with secondary breast cancer is inadequate and urgent steps are needed to provide better services for patients with this progressive incurable disease, which kills half a million women worldwide every year. Those are the key recommendations to emerge from a trio of papers in the September issue of the European Journal of Cancer Care.
Cytori Therapeutics, Inc. has extended the term and modified the focus of its current distribution agreement with GE Healthcare. GE Healthcare's sales rights allow its sales force to sell Cytori technology in the research markets in select European markets and the US.
Keeping messages brief and simple can produce gains when trying to encourage patients to complete a health care program, says research co-written by a University of Illinois expert in social psychology.
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