Jeremy Silcox, MSW, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7905 Fall Creek Rd., Wilson, WY 83014 Phone: 307-733-9098 Fax: 307-733-7672 |
Brian Hawkins, PCSW-751 Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7905 Fall Creek Rd., Wilson, WY 83014 Phone: 307-733-9098 |
Mr. Maurice Keith Mader, M.S.W., L.C.S.W. Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3850 North Wilderness Drive, Wilson, WY 83014 Phone: 307-733-8210 Fax: 307-733-8462 |
Mckenzie Jean Kirkpatrick Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7905 S Fall Creek Rd, Wilson, WY 83014 Phone: 307-733-9098 |
Vanessa Anne Fabian, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7905 S. Fall Creek Rd, Wilson, WY 83014 Phone: 307-733-9098 |
News Archive
Cardiac stress, for example a heart attack or high blood pressure, frequently leads to pathological heart growth and subsequently to heart failure. Two tiny RNA molecules play a key role in this detrimental development in mice, as researchers at the Hannover Medical School and the Göttingen Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry have now discovered.
A Scripps Florida team has been awarded nearly $1.5 million by the National Institutes of Health to identify and develop novel potent inhibitors of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause of AIDS.
Michael Koumjian, a heart surgeon for nearly three decades, said he considered treating the sickest patients a badge of honor. The San Diego doctor was frequently called upon to operate on those who had multiple illnesses or who'd undergone CPR before arriving at the hospital.
The Wall Street Journal offers a collection of stories that looks at changes in health care that could yield big responses: "Health-care innovations come in many shapes and sizes ... [including] the kind that can help reach the goal that continues to elude our policy makers: getting good care to the greatest number of people in the most cost-effective way."
In two recent studies, researchers have identified two functional variants in the inosine triphosphatase (ITPA) gene that protect patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) against anemia brought on by antiviral treatment. The ability to identify those patients protected against treatment-induced anemia will ensure completion of antiviral therapy and successful elimination of the virus.
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