Kendall P Varney, AUDIOLOGIST Audiologist Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 132 Sw Columbia Ave Ste 101, Lake City, FL 32025 Phone: 386-754-6711 Fax: 386-754-6713 |
Audiology Services Company Usa, Llc Audiologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 183 Nw Veterans St, Lake City, FL 32055 Phone: 386-758-3222 |
Debra K Griffin Aud Audiologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 183 Nw Veterans St, Lake City, FL 32055 Phone: 386-758-3222 Fax: 386-758-3101 |
Ms. Debra K Griffin, AU.D. Audiologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 183 Nw Veterans St, Lake City, FL 32055 Phone: 386-758-3222 Fax: 386-758-3101 |
News Archive
Texas' public hospitals want some Medicaid money shifted to pay for the uninsured while a proposal in Washington state to stop paying for some Medicaid ER visits deemed unnecessary is paused. Ohio is also trying to save money on its Medicare and Medicaid dual-eligible population by restructuring the program.
Levels of a small molecule found only in humans and in other primates are lower in the brains of depressed individuals, according to researchers at McGill University and the Douglas Institute.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer "Ohioans who haven't been able to find affordable health insurance because of pre-existing conditions can get high-risk coverage as soon as Sept. 1. The state will receive $152 million in federal money to pay for the new program a product of the health-care reform bill President Barack Obama signed into law in March. That's enough to cover about 5,000 people, said Carly Glick, spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Insurance."
Mr. Ryan called the vote "our generation's defining moment," and indeed, nothing could more clearly define the choice that will face voters next year. His bill would end the guarantee provided by Medicare and Medicaid to the elderly and the poor, which has been provided by the federal government with society's clear assent since 1965.
The Wall Street Journal: "As the U.S. debates the proper roles for the public and private sectors in health care, Italy's Lombardy region suggests a way that encouraging competition between the two can improve health care overall. For the past 10 years, public and private hospitals in Lombardy have competed directly for patients, and in doing so have created what is considered by many to be one of Europe's most efficient health-care systems" (Stancati, 4/13).
› Verified 1 days ago