Laraya Dingess, BS Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 20824 Route 52, Fort Gay, WV 25514 Phone: 304-648-7100 |
Donna Hardy, LPC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 10 Sammons Ln, Fort Gay, WV 25514 Phone: 304-648-7100 Fax: 304-648-7160 |
Mr. Danny Ernest Jude Jr., LICSW Counselor Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 20824 Route 52, Fort Gay, WV 25514 Phone: 304-648-7100 Fax: 304-648-7160 |
Mrs. Colleen Marie Caldwell-mccomas, LPCC Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 71 Wayne St, Fort Gay, WV 25514 Phone: 304-648-5544 Fax: 304-648-5989 |
Harriet Clementine Gibson, BA Counselor Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 20824 Route 52, Fort Gay, WV 25514 Phone: 304-648-7100 |
News Archive
The annual meeting of the World Health Assembly (WHA) convened on Monday in Geneva, Switzerland, Deutsche Presse-Agentur/Monsters and Critics.com reports. According to the news service, influenza vaccines, the fight against tuberculosis, intellectual property and reducing counterfeit drugs will be discussed (4/17).
Millions of people have a genetic variant linked to increased risk of ischemic stroke, reports an international research team including scientists at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston in a study published online by The New England Journal of Medicine on April 15.
"The astounding thing about the global abortion debate is not that some people have deeply held views about what a pregnancy is and when a human existence begins" but that "policymakers continue to ignore carefully amassed information about the actual outcome of programs and laws related to sexuality and reproduction," Marianne Møllmann, senior policy adviser with Amnesty International's International Secretariat, writes in this Guardian opinion piece.
According to a new study carried out at the University of Eastern Finland, the distribution of drug molecules within the brain can be improved by utilizing LAT1, which is expressed highly in the brain.
An article published in the May 2010 edition of Postgraduate Medicine documents a case study where a previously healthy, 15-week-old male infant was misdiagnosed and died of meningococcal disease. Initially the patient showed signs of the common cold and was treated as such, but symptoms worsened and he was admitted to the hospital emergency department.
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