Mr Brandon Lee Mclaughlin, PA | |
2510 18th Ave, Central City, NE 68826 | |
(308) 946-3845 | |
(308) 946-2357 |
Full Name | Mr Brandon Lee Mclaughlin |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Speciality | Physician Assistant |
Experience | 19 Years |
Location | 2510 18th Ave, Central City, Nebraska |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Yes. He accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1104935071 | NPI | - | NPPES |
37871 | Other | NE | BLUECROSS & BLUESHIELD |
P00295047 | Other | RAILROAD MEDICARE |
Taxonomy | Type | License (State) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
207Q00000X | Family Medicine | 1237 (Nebraska) | Secondary |
363A00000X | Physician Assistant | 1237 (Nebraska) | Primary |
Facility Name | Location | Facility Type |
---|---|---|
Merrick Medical Center/litzenberg Memorial County Hospital | Central city, NE | Hospital |
Group Practice Name | Group PECOS PAC ID | No. of Members |
---|---|---|
Merrick Medical Center | 9537445812 | 13 |
News Archive
A groundbreaking event including an array of expert speakers outlining the challenges faced in combating this spiralling condition and how better outcomes can be achieved. This is an event for anyone involved with or affected by dementia who wishes to hear all the latest developments. Speakers include:
Proteins are the essential substrate of learning and memory. However, while memories can last a life-time, proteins are relatively short-lived molecules that need to be replenished every couple of days.
Academics and healthcare professionals from Manchester and London will travel to Uganda this week (6 August) to push on with ambitious plans to try to help the country's Ministry of Health roll out cervical cancer screening to all women by 2020.
Some senators have raised concerns that a plan developed by CMS Administrator Mark McClellan and Social Security Administration Commissioner Jo Anne Barnhart to address errors in the deduction of Medicare prescription drug benefit premiums from Social Security checks "might be too harsh" for low-income beneficiaries, The Hill reports.
Scientists have pinpointed a chemical messenger that frees some white blood cells from the body's normal constraints, allowing the cells to act like renegades that could damage nerves in the central nervous system. The work, to be published in the July 15 issue of the Journal of Immunology and just published on-line, helps explain one of the fundamental mysteries of multiple sclerosis (MS).
› Verified 9 days ago
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Mr Brandon Lee Mclaughlin, PA 2510 18th Ave, Central City, NE 68826-2123 Ph: (308) 946-3845 | Mr Brandon Lee Mclaughlin, PA 2510 18th Ave, Central City, NE 68826 Ph: (308) 946-3845 |
News Archive
A groundbreaking event including an array of expert speakers outlining the challenges faced in combating this spiralling condition and how better outcomes can be achieved. This is an event for anyone involved with or affected by dementia who wishes to hear all the latest developments. Speakers include:
Proteins are the essential substrate of learning and memory. However, while memories can last a life-time, proteins are relatively short-lived molecules that need to be replenished every couple of days.
Academics and healthcare professionals from Manchester and London will travel to Uganda this week (6 August) to push on with ambitious plans to try to help the country's Ministry of Health roll out cervical cancer screening to all women by 2020.
Some senators have raised concerns that a plan developed by CMS Administrator Mark McClellan and Social Security Administration Commissioner Jo Anne Barnhart to address errors in the deduction of Medicare prescription drug benefit premiums from Social Security checks "might be too harsh" for low-income beneficiaries, The Hill reports.
Scientists have pinpointed a chemical messenger that frees some white blood cells from the body's normal constraints, allowing the cells to act like renegades that could damage nerves in the central nervous system. The work, to be published in the July 15 issue of the Journal of Immunology and just published on-line, helps explain one of the fundamental mysteries of multiple sclerosis (MS).
› Verified 9 days ago