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The Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, same thing: top-notch quality, lower costs.
WHITEHOUSE: THE WHITE HOUSE
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"Overall gum chewing is more beneficial than it is harmful, " says Dr. Michael Benninger, chairman of the Head and Neck Institute at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.
CNN: Chew on this: Gum may be good for body, mind
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"Robotic surgery does help me when I have to go really deep in the pelvis or use a lot of sutures, " says gynecological surgeon Marie Paraiso at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, who uses both procedures.
WSJ: Study Raises Doubts Over Robotic Surgery
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"The benefits of chocolate come from flavonoids, and those are mainly found in dark chocolate, not Easter eggs, which are usually milk chocolate and have a lot of saturated fat, " says Julia Zumpano, a registered clinical dietitian at the Cleveland Clinic, in Ohio.
CNN: Daily chocolate may keep the heart doctor away
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Later-in-life diagnoses of autism are not uncommon, says Leslie Speer, clinical psychologist at the Cleveland Clinic Center for Autism in Cleveland, Ohio.
CNN: With autism, no longer invisible
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"This is a huge reduction, unprecedented reduction in risk occurring very quickly, " said Dr. Steven Nissen, a cardiologist at Ohio's Cleveland Clinic, who has studied the significance of CRP in predicting heart disease.
CNN: Study: Cholesterol drugs could help those with healthy levels
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The Cleveland Clinic, which includes eight hospitals in Ohio along with its flagship campus, introduced a new communication course incorporating the Four Habits model in fall 2011.
WSJ: Talking Cure for Health Care: Improve Doctors' People Skills
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What insurance provider in Northern Ohio is going to exclude the Cleveland Clinic from its list of providers?
FORBES: Are Insurance Companies the Key to Lower Prices?
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Cleveland Clinic, for example, opened nine regional hospitals in northeast Ohio, as well as health centers in southern Florida, Toronto, and Las Vegas, and is now going international, with a three-hundred-and-sixty-four-bed hospital in Abu Dhabi scheduled to open next year.
NEWYORKER: Big Med