Tessa Fain, PA Emergency Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1015 Medical Center Pkwy, Selma, AL 36701 Phone: 334-418-4100 |
Phillip Hicks, MD Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1015 Medical Center Pkwy, Selma, AL 36701 Phone: 800-893-9698 |
Dr. Cesar Arthro Ravelo, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1015 Medical Center Pkwy, Selma, AL 36701 Phone: 334-270-9793 |
Dr. Jose Antonio Lopez-lago, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1015 Medical Center Pkwy, Selma, AL 36701 Phone: 706-582-2393 |
Dr. Sean Brian Bohannon, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 203 Vaughan Memorial Dr, Selma, AL 36701 Phone: 334-375-8007 Fax: 334-526-1849 |
News Archive
As Brazilians make final preparations to host the world's premier showcase of athleticism, the Olympics, a new paper in the Journal of the American Heart Association reports that many citizens of the host country are not taking enough advantage of the health benefits of exercise.
The average age of a woman diagnosed with breast cancer is 63, so it is critical to have effective proven, therapies for an older patient population. But older women with breast cancer are underrepresented in clinic trials, so there is little data on the effects of chemotherapy used in addition to other therapies such as surgery.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today issued final guidance for people who wish to comment during the agency's advisory committee meetings. The guidance provides instructions on how to request a time to speak and how FDA staff should respond to requests to speak at the meetings.
Veterinary authorities in Bulgaria have called for culling of nearly 8,000 ducks according to a food safety agency yesterday after two more regions there have reported avian flu infection. According to the agency a total of four outbreaks of bird flu have been registered in Bulgaria at this time.
American women who live along the U.S.-Mexico border frequently buy over-the-counter oral contraceptives from Mexican pharmacies because they don't need a prescription and can send a friend to pick up the pills, according to a study by researchers from two University of Texas campuses and Ibis Reproductive Health.
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