Jeffrey A Dann, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 21 Hospital Dr Ste 140, Palm Coast, FL 32164 Phone: 386-445-8530 |
Terrence C Regan, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 21 Hospital Dr Ste 140, Palm Coast, FL 32164 Phone: 386-445-8530 Fax: 386-446-5087 |
Ralph A Highshaw, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 61 Memorial Medical Pkwy Ste 3807, Palm Coast, FL 32164 Phone: 386-586-1705 Fax: 386-586-1706 |
News Archive
"Cellphones and Brain Tumors: 15 Reasons for Concern, Science, Spin and the Truth Behind Interphone," was released today by a collaborative of international EMF activists. Groups affiliated with the report include Powerwatch and the Radiation Research Trust in the U.K., and in the U.S., EMR Policy Institute, ElectromagenticHealth.org and The Peoples Initiative Foundation. Download the report.
By borrowing mathematical tools from theoretical physics, scientists have recently developed a theory that explains why the brain tissue of humans and other vertebrates is segregated into the familiar "gray matter" and "white matter."
With the financial crisis still hanging over many countries, this year's World Health Report from the World Health Organization, "Health Systems Financing: The Path to Universal Coverage" is timely and relevant to the question of how to ensure that all people have access to health care services, without suffering financial hardship. This is the conclusion of a Perspective article on the 2010 World Health Report from Sara Bennett (Johns Hopkins University, USA) and colleagues, published in PLoS Medicine to coincide with the release of the Report.
Skanska will reduce order bookings for the fourth quarter of 2010 by USD 63 M, approximately SEK 450 M. The reason is that a customer in California has decided to re-examine its plans for the expansion of a 6,500-square-meter hospital building.
Gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), a substance in evening primrose oil and several other plant oils used in herbal medicine, inhibits action of Her-2/neu, a cancer gene that is responsible for almost 30 percent of all breast cancers, Northwestern University researchers report.
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