Opening Hours

The Care Deeply Clinic is open Tuesday from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm. Appointments are required. If you will not be able to make your appointment, please call us by 9:00 AM on the Monday before so we can then schedule someone waiting for an appointment. To schedule an appointment, please call 973.652.2451.

  • Mondays: 8.00 am - 8.00 pm
  • Tuesdays: 8.00 am - 8.00 pm
  • Wednesdays: 8.00 am - 8.00 pm
  • Thursdays: 8.00 am - 8.00 pm

Book an Appointment

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Primary Care

Our primary care practice welcomes you and your entire family. At the Care Deeply Clinic, we provide continuing and comprehensive healthcare, including most preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic services for a wide array of acute and chronic problems. The Care Deeply Clinic is especially devoted to making each individual patient’s needs and concerns a priority.

Virtual Care​ Program

Rather than coming to our office, you can remain in the comfort of your home and still receive a consultation/appointment with one of our providers. At Care Deeply Clinic, we strive to be available for our patients and make the process of a care visit as simple and seamless as we can. Our Online Appointment system allows you to book your time and skip showing up to the clinic. If you want a virtual clinic visit, our Virtual Care program can put you in contact with a provider quickly and safely from the comfort of your own home.

Preventive Health Care Management

The services we provide include Acute, regular and preventative health care, Management of some chronic and long-term medical conditions such as diabetes, COPD, asthma, high blood pressure, Health maintenance through return visits and education, Referrals to specialists, Dental care referrals, Vison referrals, Help obtaining free or affordable medications.

Assist individuals and families

The Care Deeply Clinic provides significant diseases and conditions treatment such as cold and flu, infections, high blood pressure, hormone imbalance, hepatitis, diabetes, and sexually transmitted diseases. Care Deeply Clinic also provides medical history analysis, physical exams, diagnostic testing, immunization delivery, and patient education.

Additional Services

At the Care Deeply Clinic, we provide continuing and comprehensive healthcare, including most preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic services for a wide array of acute and chronic problems. The Care Deeply Clinic is especially devoted to making each individual patient’s needs and concerns a priority.

Cardiac Treatment

The services we provide include Acute, regular and preventative health care, Management of some chronic and long-term medical conditions such as diabetes, COPD, asthma, high blood pressure, Health maintenance through return visits and education, Referrals to specialists, Dental care referrals, Vison referrals, Help obtaining free or affordable medications

Routine Checkup

At Care Deeply Clinic, we strive to be available for our patients and make the process of a care visit as simple and seamless as we can. Our Online Appointment system allows you to book your time and skip showing up to the clinic. If you want a virtual clinic visit, our Virtual Care program can put you in contact with a provider quickly and safely from the comfort of your own home.

Jennifer Crayner-Aryee

Vida Paintsil

Enjoy our Client’s Feedback

Your needs and concerns are our priority. Our experienced providers take ownership of their patients’ problems and are committed to providing the most advanced medical care. Above all, our providers maintain an attitude of the deepest respect for the dignity of the human person.

Our Recent Blogs

Healthy Eating consists of a diet that includes a wide variety of food, not just foods deemed as “healthy”.

FACT. Eating only healthy food is not the same thing as a healthy eating. Healthy foods are foods that promote health when consumed while healthy eating also considers your relationship with food. If you listed healthy foods your list might include whole grains, lean meats, fruits, vegetables, and healthy fats. If you ate a diet that consisted only of these foods, you might be eating a lot of healthy foods, but that does not necessarily mean that you are following a healthy diet. Healthy eating, or a healthy diet, does not mean that you must eat 100% healthy foods. According to the USDA, even sweets and desserts can fit into a healthy diet. In fact, healthy eating looks more at the bigger picture related to what you eat, the frequency, the amount you had, and your psychological state while eating. Some questions you can ask yourself to assess your diet include: Do you leave out entire food groups? Do you find yourself eating the same thing every day? Do you eat when you are not hungry? Do you skip meals? Do you eat past the point of comfortable fullness? Do you eat differently when you are by yourself? Do you use the clock to let you know when it is time to eat? Do you eat when you are sad, lonely, angry, or stressed? Do you feel guilty after eating? The more questions you answered yes to, the more you may need to spend time focusing on your relationship with food rather than just eating healthy food.

4 Dec. 14 1

Using Sugar In Moderation

Sugars are simple carbohydrates that come in many forms. Common sources are table sugar, honey, molasses, syrup or corn sweeteners (sucrose), sugar from fruit (fructose), and sugar from milk (lactose). Sugars and many foods containing large amounts of sugars have calories but little nutrition. These foods often contain fat, which should also be eaten in moderation. Eating sugar does not cause diabetes, but eating too much can lead to unhealthy weight gain. Sugars or any carbohydrate that sticks to the teeth can lead to tooth decay. On a food label: 5 grams of sugar = 1 teaspoon of sugar. Sugars listed under the food label’s Nutrition Facts are the sugars that occur naturally in the food (fructose, lactose), along with those that are added during processing. TIP: Carefully read labels on “sugar-free foods.” Some of these foods, such as desserts and candies, have the same amount of total carbohydrate and calories as the original product. IF YOU HAVE DIABETES... The key to managing diabetes is to balance your total carbohydrate intake with your insulin (what your body makes or what you take) and exercise. Carbohydrates include: • starches (bread, cereal, rice, pasta, potatoes, dry beans, corn, peas) (a) simple sugars found in fruit and milk, and (b) simple sugars added to foods during processing Foods that contain added sugars, such as cookies and cake can be substituted or exchanged for other carbohydrate foods in the diet. It is not healthy to regularly give up foods from the starch, fruit and milk group for desserts. Your dietitian can help you decide what is right for you. TIP: A food containing 15 grams of carbohydrate, e.g., 1 tablespoon sugar/honey can be exchanged or swapped for 1 starch exchange, 1 fruit exchange or 1 milk exchange. Each exchange contains 15 grams of carbohydrate. When cooking with sugar, reduce sugar by 1/3 to 1/2.

26 Sept. 22 3