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Mashup Score: 1
Surgeries were cancelled after Providence Health switched its contract to Sound Physicians and cut ties with an Oregon provider-owned company
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Guest Opinion: Time To Increase Access To Basic Dental Care In Oregon | The Lund Report - 4 year(s) ago
With a shortage of dentists in Oregon, the Legislature should pass a bill allowing the state to license dental therapists.
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Guest Opinion: Time To Increase Access To Basic Dental Care In Oregon | The Lund Report - 4 year(s) ago
With a shortage of dentists in Oregon, the Legislature should pass a bill allowing the state to license dental therapists.
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Guest Opinion: Time To Increase Access To Basic Dental Care In Oregon | The Lund Report - 4 year(s) ago
With a shortage of dentists in Oregon, the Legislature should pass a bill allowing the state to license dental therapists.
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Coronavirus Fuels Explosive Growth In Telehealth ― And Concern About Fraud | The Lund Report - 4 year(s) ago
On March 17, Medicare chief Seema Verma stepped to the podium at a White House coronavirus briefing and unveiled a “historic action” to promo
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1
The pandemic has expanded the use of telehealth, but not everybody has equal access to the technology. Homeless and impoverished people often lack mobile devices, and patients in rural and frontier areas of Oregon have poor or no broadband access.
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Press Release: Antioxidant Use During Chemotherapy Risky for Breast Cancer Patients | The Lund Report - 4 year(s) ago
Breast cancer patients who take the dietary supplements known as antioxidants, as well as iron, vitamin B12, and omega-3 fatty acids, during chemotherapy may be at increased risk of disease recurrence and death, according to new study results appearing in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
Source: www.thelundreport.orgCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
Anesthesiologist shortage at Providence raises concerns over private equity | The Lund Report https://t.co/QTFk6nzOZT