Ms. Ashley A. Lester, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 139 Lila Doyle Dr, Seneca, SC 29672 Phone: 864-482-3483 Fax: 864-482-3497 |
Jane Barker, LISW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 800 Whitworth Circle, Suite B, Seneca, SC 29672 Phone: 864-221-9150 Fax: 864-882-2712 |
Paulette Herbert, LISW-CP Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 200 W North 1st St Ste B, Seneca, SC 29678 Phone: 864-973-1359 Fax: 864-973-8965 |
Donna Smathers Beebe Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 203 Central Park Ln Ste A, Seneca, SC 29678 Phone: 864-973-1359 Fax: 864-973-8965 |
Cheryl Ann Smart, LISW-CP Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 206 W North 1st St, Suite C, Seneca, SC 29678 Phone: 864-888-4211 Fax: 888-671-7027 |
Ms. Michael Jane Crouse, LISW-CP, CACP Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 691 S Oak St, Seneca, SC 29678 Phone: 864-882-7563 Fax: 864-882-7388 |
News Archive
During the two-year longitudinal study, William Milgram, Ph.D., of the University of Toronto, Elizabeth Head, Ph.D., and Carl Cotman, Ph.D., of the University of California, Irvine and their colleagues found older beagles performed better on cognitive tests and were more likely to learn new tasks when they were fed a diet fortified with plenty of fruits, vegetables and vitamins, were exercised at least twice weekly, and were given the opportunity to play with other dogs and a variety of stimulating toys.
Susan Dorman, M.D., an infectious disease physician at the Medical University of South Carolina, was recently awarded a 10-year, $9.9 million contract by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to run trials for the Tuberculosis Trials Consortium.
Every day, pharmacists sidestep potential mix-ups while they're filling prescriptions-perhaps the doctor's scrawl is hard to decipher or sometimes the drug bottle is mistaken for another that looks awfully similar.
Living Cell Technologies announced pre-clinical results today showing its brain protection product, NeurotrophinCell (NtCell) produces a marked reduction in the size of brain lesions in a Huntington's disease (HD) model.
Ninety-two percent of seniors enrolled in the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit in 2008 are satisfied with their coverage according to a national phone survey by RetireSafe, a nationwide education and advocacy group for older Americans.
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