Mrs. Sara D Nolan, LICSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5 Bank Street, North Bennington, VT 05257 Phone: 802-442-2000 Fax: 866-830-0802 |
Jane Sobel, MSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 84 Mechanic St, North Bennington, VT 05257 Phone: 802-447-0069 Fax: 802-447-0069 |
Matthew Reed Macaulay, LICSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5 Bank St, North Bennington, VT 05257 Phone: 908-705-6751 |
Ms. Ruth Ann Myers, LICSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 940 Water St Unit 9, North Bennington, VT 05257 Phone: 802-753-1571 Fax: 802-442-1200 |
Erika Dawn Crowers, LICSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 5 Bank St, North Bennington, VT 05257 Phone: 802-823-2787 |
News Archive
The Epilepsy Therapy Project (ETP) and the Epilepsy Foundation (EF) today announced the latest grant recipients of its New Therapy Grants Program, a unique joint venture of the non-profit epilepsy organizations, to advance promising epilepsy research in clinical development. The grant awards, totaling approximately $200,000 in funding, will support an experimental gene therapy that directly targets epileptogenic brain tissue, as well as an electrode system that has the potential to improve the efficacy of surgical therapies for certain epilepsy syndromes.
Kaiser Health News staff writer Jessica Marcy talks with Dr. Antonio Falcon, a physician in the border town of Rio Grande City, Texas. He explained his concern "about several health threats facing border communities, including tuberculosis, diabetes, obesity and the H1N1 virus that causes swine flu."
Scientists from academia, industry, and government have developed a combination of monoclonal antibodies that protected animals from all three Ebola viruses known to cause human disease. Their work is described in two companion studies published online in the journal Cell Host & Microbe.
Researchers at The University of Nottingham are studying whether people's genetic makeup could make them more likely to develop osteoarthritis of the knee and hip — the most common medical condition to affect the joints.
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