Ms. Juanita Dolores Lopez, MASTER OF SOCIAL WOR Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4851 Independence St., Suite 200, Wheatridge, CO 80033 Phone: 303-425-0300 Fax: 303-432-5071 |
Dennis William Ortega I Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4851 Independence Street, Wheatridge, CO 80033 Phone: 303-425-0300 |
Kaisha Valentin, CAC I Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4051 Independence Street, Suite 200, Wheatridge, CO 80033 Phone: 303-425-0300 Fax: 303-432-5071 |
News Archive
A study with first-time learners of Japanese has measured how brain activity changes after just a few months of studying a new language. The results show that acquiring a new language initially boosts brain activity, which then reduces as language skills improve.
A combination of airway-opening drugs and inhaled inflammation-reducing steroids works better at preventing severe asthma attacks than a normal dose of steroids alone, according to a new review of recent studies.
BioVex Inc, a biotechnology company developing clinical stage treatments for cancer and the prevention of infectious disease, announced today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the design of a single, pivotal, Phase III clinical trial evaluating its lead product, OncoVEX (GM-CSF), for the first-line treatment of patients with squamous cell cancer of the head and neck.
"Tripoli's hospitals have put the worst behind them after an end to the fighting in Libya's capital opened the way to a flood of aid and enabled medical staff to get back to work, aid agencies said on Monday," Reuters reports, adding, "Although the violence in Tripoli has not completely ended, the relative peace has reassured aid agencies that they can now get into the capital."
NYU Langone Medical Center researchers have developed a powerful new method to investigate the discrete steps necessary to turn on individual genes and examine how the process goes wrong in cancer and other diseases. The finding, based on seven years of research and described in the April 9 issue of Molecular Cell, allows scientists to investigate the unfolding of DNA, a process required for gene activation.
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