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Internal Medicine Doctors and Physicians

Find comprehensive reports and ratings on a local internal medicine doctor, physician, or surgeon.

Internal Medicine Information

Description

Internal medicine is the branch of medicine that deals with treating the whole patient. An internal medicine physician, also called an internist, can treat many illnesses and conditions, and is skilled in treating a patient who has several illnesses or disorders at the same time. This internist, who can be a primary care physician, emphasizes disease prevention and wellness, but can treat problems of the eyes, ears, skin, nervous system and reproductive organs, along with mental health or substance abuse issues.

The internal medicine physician can also treat cancer or diseases of the heart, blood, kidneys, joints, and digestive, respiratory and vascular systems, while concentrating on the wellness of the patient as a whole.

Diseases / Illnesses Treated

Physicians in this specialty treat patients suffering from numerous diseases and illnesses, but some of the most common are Broncho-Esophagology, Pneumonia, pectus excavatum, Hyper / Hypoglycemia, Bronchitis, Macular Degeneration, Diabetes, cystic fibrosis, Asthma, osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis , Emphysema, cancer, infection, Yeast infection, Autism, Congestive heart failure, Anemia, Heart Attack, and Aneurysm.

Procedures Performed

Once properly diagnosed, practitioners can perform numerous procedures on patients including Lithotripsy, Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP, dialysis, mechanical ventilation, cardioversion, angioplasty, endoscopy, intra-aortic balloon pump, cardiac ablation, and Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP).

Tests Performed

To diagnose patients with possible illnesses and diseases, specialists will often perform one of many tests including Bone density test, dialysis, physicial / check up, FAA-Flight Physicial, physicial examination, x-ray, biopsy, Blood Test, Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), ultrasound, Computed Axial Tomography (CT or CAT Scan), Upper GI (Barium Swallow), electrolyte test, Lower GI (Barium Enema), stool test, pH probe test, and microbiological culture.

Location Density Information

Doctor density varies by specialty and location. The United States has 131,502 practicing internal medicine doctors. Broken out by state, internal medicine doctor density in Alabama is 1,430, in Alaska is 182, in Arizona is 2,533, in Arkansas is 579, in California is 15,015, in Colorado is 1,772, in Connecticut is 2,313, in Delaware is 436, in District of Columbia is 870, in Florida is 7,116, in Georgia is 3,572, in Hawaii is 767, in Idaho is 260, in Illinois is 6,823, in Indiana is 1,929, in Iowa is 803, in Kansas is 893, in Kentucky is 1,580, in Louisiana is 1,487, in Maine is 583, in Maryland is 3,391, in Massachusetts is 7,546, in Michigan is 5,403, in Minnesota is 2,234, in Mississippi is 776, in Missouri is 2,727, in Montana is 283, in Nebraska is 596, in Nevada is 870, in New Hampshire is 727, in New Jersey is 4,501, in New Mexico is 683, in New York is 11,089, in North Carolina is 3,367, in North Dakota is 187, in Ohio is 5,243, in Oklahoma is 1,039, in Oregon is 1,702, in Pennsylvania is 7,054, in Rhode Island is 1,011, in South Carolina is 1,459, in South Dakota is 235, in Tennessee is 2,399, in Texas is 6,752, in Utah is 630, in Vermont is 272, in Virginia is 2,885, in Washington is 2,564, in West Virginia is 653, in Wisconsin is 2,076, and in Wyoming is 114.


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