Gabriella Juliet Avellino, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2 Dudley St Ste 175, Providence, RI 02905 Phone: 401-421-0710 Fax: 401-421-0796 |
Arthur Wong, MD Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 195 Collyer St, Suite 201, Providence, RI 02904 Phone: 401-277-7799 |
Dr. Rachel Morgan Greenberg, MD Urology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 593 Eddy St, Providence, RI 02903 Phone: 401-444-5471 Fax: 401-444-4557 |
Dragan J Golijanin, M.D. Urology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2 Dudley St Ste 185, Providence, RI 02905 Phone: 401-421-0710 Fax: 401-444-6947 |
Dr. John Thomas Morgan, MD Urology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 593 Eddy St, Providence, RI 02903 Phone: 401-444-8450 |
Shadi Al Ekish, M.D. Urology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 593 Eddy St, Providence, RI 02903 Phone: 401-444-8570 Fax: 401-444-6947 |
Dr. Suhas Penukonda, MD Urology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 593 Eddy St, Providence, RI 02903 Phone: 401-444-5795 |
News Archive
The Washington Post: Rapid growth in the number of applicants for Social Security disability benefits has soared between 2008 and 2009, threatening the solvency of the program. With an increase of 21 percent in that timeframe, "growth is the sharpest in the 54-year history of the program. It threatens the program's fiscal stability and adds to an administrative backlog that is slowing the flow of benefits to those who need them most." Broad economic problems and a flood of jobless applicants have caused the spike (Fletcher, 9/14).
A new study by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy describes how using street outreach workers is an effective strategy to reach and engage youth with the goal of violence prevention and intervention.
University of Nebraska Medical Center researchers have received a $1.9 million grant from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency of the U.S. Department of Defense to develop a new therapy to protect military members from nerve agent exposure.
A team of scientists led by Johns Hopkins and Stanford University researchers has laid the groundwork for understanding how variations in immune responses to Lyme disease can contribute to the many different outcomes of this bacterial infection seen in individual patients. A report on the work appears online April 16 in PLOS One.
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