Constantine Osepyan Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1523 Longbranch Ave, Grover Beach, CA 93433 Phone: 805-473-7080 |
Dr. Sandra S. Thomas, PH.D. Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 160 N 7th St, Suite A, Grover Beach, CA 93433 Phone: 805-473-1543 Fax: 805-473-1543 |
Sally Lynn Dutton, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 940 Ramona Ave Ste J, Grover Beach, CA 93433 Phone: 805-994-9914 |
Ms. Jane A Hill, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 150 S 6th St, Suite C1, Grover Beach, CA 93433 Phone: 805-481-8534 |
Jeanne Auerbach, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 200 S 13th St Ste 209, Grover Beach, CA 93433 Phone: 805-474-5689 |
Maria Christina Thammasen Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1523 Longbranch Ave, Ste 201, Grover Beach, CA 93433 Phone: 805-473-7187 |
News Archive
New research by Professor James Jaccard, Ph.D., and Nicole Levitz, M.P.H., of the New York University Silver School of Social Work and its Center for Latino Adolescent and Family Health (CLAFH) has led them to suggest 12 evidence-based principles that can be used to improve contraceptive counseling of adolescents in U.S. health care clinics, doctor's offices, and health service organizations.
Cancer Research UK comments on the BMJ paper "Childhood cancer in relation to distance from high voltage power lines in England and Wales: a case control study."
People with Alzheimer's disease experience a rate of cognitive decline four times greater than those with no cognitive impairment according to a new study by researchers at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.
Yale Cancer Center researchers have developed a vaccine strategy that reduces the risk of flu infections in cancer patients at highest risk for influenza. The findings were presented Dec. 6 at the 57th annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology in Orlando, Florida.
A recent UK study of 216 teenagers, published in the Lancet, found that breastfeeding in infancy is likely to reduce the risk of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease in later life.
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