Ms. Alison Crippen Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 91 Main St Unit 115, Warren, RI 02885 Phone: 317-815-5501 |
Miss Denise Marie Fragoza, MSW,LICSW,LCDP Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 654 Metacom Ave, Warren, RI 02885 Phone: 401-245-5395 Fax: 508-678-6617 |
Tamara Dallaire Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 23 Denver Ave, Warren, RI 02885 Phone: 401-559-3566 |
Martin Jewell Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 25 Railroad Ave, Warren, RI 02885 Phone: 401-247-0173 |
News Archive
A European team of scientists have built the first atlas of white-matter microstructure in the human brain. The project's final results have the potential to change the face of neuroscience and medicine over the coming decade.
Leon Reijmers, PhD, assistant professor of neuroscience at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, is one of 55 recipients of the National Institutes of Health Director's New Innovator Award. Reijmers is investigating the way memories are stored in the brain, specifically focusing on the proteins involved in long-term memory storage.
Genomics has a diversity problem. Despite the dazzling promise of genetically-tailored treatments and therapies, fundamental questions remain about whether precision medicine will advance health equity or make disparities worse.
Terminix, the leading provider of termite and pest control services in the United States, today warned of two serious mosquito-borne diseases which are being reported in Florida. The Florida Department of Health this week issued a report confirming 18 cases of chikungunya virus and 24 cases of dengue fever.
Prairie dogs, once abundant in the Rocky Mountains and Great Plains, have been decimated in recent decades by plague - a virulent bacterial disease spread by fleas.Plague outbreaks periodically sweep through large prairie dog towns with thousands of inhabitants, killing virtually the entire population within months. Other prairie dogs move in and build a new colony, which eventually is wiped out when the disease returns.
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