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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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19 results for Physicians
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Record #:
24143
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Campbell University is starting a new medical school, which is the fifth one in North Carolina. The author discusses the difference between this new school and the others in North Carolina.
Record #:
36049
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Talent was present; absent was funding. In a campus meeting, Senator Burr heralded Johnson and Johnson’s offer to help ECU fulfill medical missions like curing diabetes. A research university springing from a teacher’s training school, then, may seem off the beaten path. Realizing this intent—improving the quality of life—made it obvious ECU has stayed on course.
Record #:
7962
Author(s):
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Best Doctors, Inc. is a Boston-based company that offers one way to rate physicians. The company asks about 35,000 physicians and surgeons nationwide to grade other doctors in their specialty. Those with the highest averages make the final list. In the state, about 5 percent, or 889 doctors made the list. Business North Carolina lists doctors in the state who made the list in twenty-one specialties, including cardiovascular, infectious disease, nephrology, and ophthalmology.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 26 Issue 7, July 2006, p56-60, 62, 64, 66-71, il Periodical Website
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Record #:
7302
Abstract:
Best Doctors, Inc., is a Boston-based company that rates physicians. Its approach is unique. The company asks practicing physicians what specialists they would go to if they needed to see a doctor. Best Doctors then verifies these recommended doctors' licenses and board certifications and checks for any disciplinary actions against them. The company then asks the doctors a series of questions about their experience, practice, and research. BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA lists doctors in the state who made the list in twenty-one specialties, including cardiovascular, infectious disease, nephrology, and ophthalmology.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 25 Issue 7, July 2005, p50-52, 54, 56, 58-63, il Periodical Website
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Record #:
7295
Abstract:
Best Doctors, Inc., is a Boston-based company that rates physicians. Its approach is unique. The company asks practicing physicians what specialists they would go to if they needed to see a doctor. Best Doctors then verifies these recommended doctors' licenses and board certifications and checks for any disciplinary actions against them. The company then asks the doctors a series of questions about their experience, practice, and research. Business North Carolina lists doctors in the state who made the list in twenty-one specialties, including cardiovascular, infectious disease, nephrology, and ophthalmology.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 24 Issue 7, July 2004, p52-54, 56, 58, 60, 62-67, il Periodical Website
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Record #:
23446
Author(s):
Abstract:
George Hatem, the son of poor Lebanese immigrants, moved with his family from Buffalo, NY to Greenville in the 1920s. Attending local high school and U.N.C. Chapel Hill, George studied to become a doctor. With the coming of the depression and its resulting lack of jobs for those in the medical profession, George went to Lebanon to attend medical school at the American University in Beirut. Following his graduation from both American University and the University of Geneva in Switzerland, Dr. Hatem traveled to China where he helped in the eradication of venereal disease in Shanghai and Beijing. During the Communist Revolution, he examined and made acquaintance with Mao Tse - tung, who made Hatem an advisor to the Chinese Ministry of Public Health. Over the next 55 years, Dr. Hatem made China his home, returning occasionally to Greenville to visit with family and friends. Through his efforts to eradicate venereal disease and leprosy in China, he was the recipient of several awards including the Albert Lasker Public Service Award. Dr. George Hatem died in 1988 in Beijing following a ten - year battle with cancer.
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Record #:
5308
Abstract:
Best Doctors, Inc. compiles evaluations of over 30,000 physicians and rates them and their peers. BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA lists doctors in the state who made the list in twenty-one specialties, including cardiovascular, infectious disease, nephrology, and ophthalmology.
Source:
Business North Carolina (NoCar HF 5001 B8x), Vol. 22 Issue 7, July 2002, p44,46, 48-50, 52-54, 56-59, por Periodical Website
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Record #:
5117
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Abstract:
Managed care in North Carolina is evolving into two levels of service - rural and urban. In urban counties having employer-paid plans and multiple hospitals, HMO membership is highest. In rural counties, like Gates and Tyrrell, membership is insignificant. Counties are ranked by the number of physicians per 10,000 population served. Orange County ranks first with 86.4 physicians per 10,000 and Pitt third with 40.7. Twenty-five counties have 6.5 physicians or fewer per 10,000.
Record #:
2137
Author(s):
Abstract:
Competition among hospitals is helping to moderate rising health-care costs in the state. Shorter hospital stays, alliances with nursing homes, and purchase of physician practices by hospitals are contributing to this trend.
Record #:
776
Author(s):
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Doctor's, being human, are susceptible to the foibles of the species: greed, bad judgment, and faulty diagnoses. Oppenheimer exposes some of the devious practices doctors engage in, and removes the aura of infallibility that surrounds doctors.
Source:
Independent Weekly (NoCar Oversize AP 2 .I57 [volumes 13 - 23 on microfilm]), Vol. 10 Issue 33, Aug 1992, p7, il Periodical Website
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Record #:
801
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Steven Scott, owner of Coastal Healthcare Group, Inc., a contractor of emergency department physicians based in Fayetteville, was chosen the 1992 Entrepreneur of the Year.
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Record #:
845
Author(s):
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A group of Tar Heel doctors led by Bob Greczyn formed Carolina Physicians' Health Plan, an health maintenance organization owned by physicians.
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Record #:
3297
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Born in Tyrrell County, Edward Warren won honors for his medical practice on three continents and service in the Confederate Army. Yet, at the end of his distinguished life he wished he had been content to remain in Edenton.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 57 Issue 3, Aug 1989, p29-31, por
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Record #:
8108
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Abstract:
Bedford Brown was born January 17, 1825, in Caswell County. He studied medicine at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky, and spent several years in Virginia building a fine reputation as a physician before moving back to Yanceyville. In 1861, he became chief surgeon for the Confederate States training camp at Weldon and was appointed inspector of hospitals and camps in the Confederate Army. After the Civil War, he returned to Alexandria, Virginia, where he was a distinguished member of the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association, as well as a member of the Virginia Board of Medical Examiners. Throughout his career he wrote several papers on disease and used his own techniques to work on healing diphtheria, meningitis, pneumonia, and other diseases. In 1896, he was elected president of the Virginia Medical Society. He died a year later at his home in Virginia.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 53 Issue 8, Jan 1986, p29, por
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Record #:
9245
Author(s):
Abstract:
On February 9, 1848, Dr. Fabius Julius Haywood successfully used chloroform in an operation. He was the first doctor in the country to do so. In 1865, the Union Army seized his home and officers were quartered there. He successfully got his home back the following year.\r\n
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 47 Issue 6, Nov 1979, p21, il
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