James D Thomas, MA Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 117 Valley Rd, Pineville, KY 40977 Phone: 607-765-1075 Fax: 865-525-0393 |
Mr. Lenn Neal, CEO Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 62 Phil Gibson Rd, Pineville, KY 40977 Phone: 606-269-9220 |
Dr. Susan Harris White, PHD Counselor - Pastoral Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 130 Dogwood Trl, Pineville, KY 40977 Phone: 606-269-1219 |
News Archive
"In a speech to the Clinton Global Initiative on Tuesday, Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney acknowledged the value of foreign aid and its purpose: providing humanitarian assistance, improving security and encouraging economic growth," but "we don't know whether he would really protect the current budget ... from further cuts if he is elected," a New York Times editorial states.
Debt projections released Tuesday by the Congressional Budget Office illustrate three fiscal paths: dangerous, dumb and smart. ... President Obama has called for a balanced solution but has neither proposed serious tax reform nor adequately outlined the ways in which he would get entitlement spending, particularly Medicare, under control. The position of most Republicans, on the presidential campaign trail and in Congress, is wildly less responsible.
Nearly 40 percent of kids and teens with migraine no longer had headaches 10 years later, and another 20 percent developed less severe headaches, according to a new study published in the October 24, 2006, issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Eli Lilly and Company today announced encouraging results from a one-year pilot study examining the effect of ruboxistaurin mesylate in persons with type 2 diabetes and kidney disease (also known as "diabetic nephropathy").
Parkinson's disease continues to puzzle physicians and biologists alike - even though it is well-established that symptoms like muscle tremors, rigidity, and, during the final stages, immobility can all be traced back to the death of a certain type of brain cell called a dopaminergic neuron. The underlying cause of this cellular death is a complex web of interrelated genetic molecular processes as well as external factors, most of the details of which are well-known. But how the various factors correlate and influence each other continues to elude the scientific community.
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