Dr. Shepard graduated from the Ohio State University College of Medicine in 2003. He works in Cleveland, OH and specializes in Hematology/Oncology and Internal Medicine - Geriatrics. Dr. Shepard is affiliated with Cleveland Clinic.
Ronald D. Wolfe - St. Louis Park MN Dale D. Shepard - Bloomington MN
Assignee:
Liberty Diversified Industries - New Hope MN
International Classification:
A47F 500
US Classification:
211 86
Abstract:
A hanging display having a circuitous metal hoop which supports a doubled layer of nylon mesh netting. The netting is initially formed as a tube which is threaded through the hoop and folded back upon itself and knotted to form a basket. The basket is easily deformable to contain a large quantity and variety of products, and returns to its initial shape as products are removed. The hook and netting may be supported from above by cables, on pegboard hooks, or by a freestanding frame member.
Dale Shepard, a medical oncologist with the Cleveland Clinic, said because the treatments are so effective at attacking cancer cells, patients often report fewer side effects and also have to come to get their infusions less often about once every 28 days versus every one or two weeks with tradit
"There are a lot of smaller studies that looked at just breast or just colon and we already know there's some associations, but the strength of this study is that it shows 13 different cancers were impacted by people being more active," said Dale Shepard, M.D., PhD, an oncologist at Cleveland Clinic
Date: May 18, 2016
Category: Health
Source: Google
What Jimmy Carter announced in Sunday School brought joy to his congregation
He'll need to continue treatment because a patient in his situation "would need to go three to five years without evidence of lesions," before doctors can say he's completely cured, Dr. Dale Shepard, an oncologist at the Cleveland Clinic, told the Times.
Date: Dec 09, 2015
Category: Health
Source: Google
Appendix cancer, the rare disease that struck down ESPN's Stuart Scott: a Q&A
"Most often it's found incidentally," said Dr. Dale Shepard, a hematologist-oncologist at the Cleveland Clinic, which sees a few dozen cases of appendix cancer each year. "Someone will come into the emergency room with vague abdominal pain and will get a scan and physicians will happen to find it."