Ms. Janie Epps Harris, PCMHT, PH6042 Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1164 Carroll Rd, Port Gibson, MS 39150 Phone: 601-702-9224 |
Akeri Watts, PCMHT Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 306 Church St, Port Gibson, MS 39150 Phone: 601-437-5504 |
Lindsey Rushing Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1306 College St, Port Gibson, MS 39150 Phone: 601-738-0516 |
Nikki N Neal Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 217 Walnut St, Port Gibson, MS 39150 Phone: 601-448-5216 |
Kimberly Janell Carson Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2090 Highway 61 N, Port Gibson, MS 39150 Phone: 601-437-8185 Fax: 601-437-4888 |
News Archive
A new report to be presented at the Toronto International AIDS Conference shows that access to antiretrovirals is only part of the treatment equation.
Adults and children born with heart defects had a lower-than-expected risk of developing moderate or severe COVID-19 symptoms, finds a study of more than 7,000 patients from the congenital heart disease center at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Adults who undergo a minimally invasive technique to treat atrial fibrillation are significantly less likely to die from a heart attack or heart failure, according to a long-term study by the University of Michigan Frankel Cardiovascular Center.
Researchers, doctors and patients tend to agree that during the high-risk period after an attempted suicide, the treatment of choice is close contact, follow-up and personal interaction in order to prevent a tragic repeat. Now, however, new research shows that this strategy does not work. These surprising results from Mental Health Services in the Capital Region of Denmark and the University of Copenhagen have just been published in the British Medical Journal.
A research team of scientists from EMBL Grenoble and the IGBMC in Strasbourg, France, have, for the first time, described in molecular detail the architecture of the central scaffold of TFIID: the human protein complex essential for transcription from DNA to mRNA. The study, published today in Nature, opens new perspectives in the study of transcription and of the structure and mechanism of other large multi-protein assemblies involved in gene regulation.
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