Ms. Stacey L Beard, DDS Dentist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Highway 51 East, Rt 6 Box 840, Stilwell, OK 74960 Phone: 918-696-8805 |
Dr. Matthew Glenn Reece, DDS Dentist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: Hwy 51 East, Stilwell, OK 74960 Phone: 918-696-8800 |
Dr. Chad Catron, DDS Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 19 N 2nd St, Stilwell, OK 74960 Phone: 918-696-4200 Fax: 918-696-5322 |
Dr. Lindsay Aaron Smith, D.D.S. Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Rr 6 Box 840, Stilwell, OK 74960 Phone: 918-696-8824 |
Dr. Robert Bryan Crittenden, DDS,PC Dentist - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 704 S 2nd St, Stilwell, OK 74960 Phone: 918-696-2542 Fax: 918-696-7892 |
News Archive
Alcohol use disorders are associated with high social welfare and health care costs - but what causes them? A new Finnish study looks at the magnitude and reasons behind the economic burden alcohol use disorders have on society.
The Infectious Disease Research Institute (IDRI) today announced it has received a $790,200 grant from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), part of the US Department of Health and Human Services. The grant enables technology transfer between IDRI and the Cantacuzino National Institute of Research and Development for Microbiology and Immunology (Bucharest, Romania), with the goal of producing a pandemic flu vaccine.
A news study published in the journal Pediatrics this Monday shows that babies who are breastfed for longer than six months may reap he benefits of having better brain function right into school. The benefit may be particularly so in boys.
A specific protein once thought to exist only in the brain may play a crucial role in a deadly form of thyroid cancer, as well as other cancers, and provide a fresh target for researchers seeking ways to stop its progression, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers report today in Cancer Cell.
Patients who stop taking cholesterol-lowering drugs within a year of surviving a stroke had a two-fold increased risk of death, researchers reported in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.
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