Keith G Bryson, MD Urology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2805 5th St, Suite 100, Rapid City, SD 57701 Phone: 605-719-5700 Fax: 605-719-5701 |
Gerald W Butz, M.D. Urology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 710 Saint Anne St, Rapid City, SD 57701 Phone: 605-348-4100 Fax: 605-348-0662 |
Dr. Michael James Brekhus, M.D. Urology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2820 Mount Rushmore Rd, Rapid City, SD 57701 Phone: 605-342-3280 |
Dr. William Chambers Waller Jr., M.D. Urology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2805 5th St, 220, Rapid City, SD 57701 Phone: 605-348-1084 Fax: 605-348-3256 |
Gary Christiansen, M.D. Urology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2820 Mount Rushmore Rd, Rapid City, SD 57701 Phone: 605-342-3280 Fax: 605-348-0662 |
News Archive
Lutheran Medical Center (LMC) and Medsphere Systems Corporation today announced the successful implementation of Medsphere's OpenVista® electronic health record (EHR) solution throughout the hospital. The full service 476-bed teaching hospital is now on track to achieve meaningful use and qualify for millions of dollars made available by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
With the current H1N1 flu (swine flu) pandemic under way, many public health officials are concerned that critical healthcare resources could be stretched thin as people flood hospital emergency departments and physicians' offices to determine whether they have the illness.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is trying to hold together members of his caucus to vote for a government-run public option for health insurance that would allow states to opt-out of the plan — a plan that is getting an icy reception, even among Democrats, Bloomberg reports. Reid's "version … probably won't require employers to cover workers and will be funded through a tax on high-end insurance plans, which would put him at odds with House Democrats.
According to a new study in Clinical Transplantation, obtaining islet cells (clusters of pancreatic cells that create insulin) from living donors may be a solution to the shortage of islets available for transplantation.
University of Houston biologist Michihisa Umetani, having discovered that a certain protein partnership acts to rapidly signal molecules inside blood vessels that danger is upon them, has been awarded $382,500 by the National Institutes of Health.
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