Clarence Roy Carlson Jr., D.O. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 404 W Fountain St, Albert Lea, MN 56007 Phone: 507-373-2384 |
Dr. Gisli Engilbert Haraldsson, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 404 W Fountain St, Albert Lea, MN 56007 Phone: 507-322-8229 |
Patti A Paris, MD Emergency Medicine - Emergency Medical Services Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 404 Fountain St, Albert Lea, MN 56007 Phone: 507-373-2384 |
Steven K Wiese, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 404 W Fountain St, Albert Lea, MN 56007 Phone: 507-373-2384 |
Autumn Brogan, Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 404 W Fountain St, Mayo Clinic Health System, Dept Of Em, Albert Lea, MN 56007 Phone: 507-373-2384 |
News Archive
When mothers use marijuana during the first 12 years of their child's life, their cannabis-using children are more likely to start at an earlier age than children of non-using mothers, according to a new study from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
Although this system is already being used by professional sportspeople and teams, it cannot always be extended to amateur sportspeople or patients with limited economic resources because it requires supervision by qualified professionals.
​Basketball is a popular high school sport in the United States with 1 million participants annually. A recently published study by researchers in the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital is the first to compare and describe the occurrence and distribution patterns of basketball-related injuries treated in emergency departments and the high school athletic training setting among adolescents and teens.
New research has shown that children's risk for learning and behavior problems and obesity rises in correlation to their level of trauma exposure, says the psychiatrist at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital who oversaw the study. The findings could encourage physicians to consider diagnosing post-traumatic stress disorder rather than attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, which has similar symptoms to PTSD but very different treatment.
arGEN-X, a clinical stage human monoclonal antibody therapeutics company, announces it has attained a key success milestone in its SIMPLE Antibody research and product development collaboration with the Human Genetic Therapies division of Shire Pharmaceuticals. The milestone, which triggered an undisclosed payment from Shire, was the first demonstration of in vivo proof of concept for one of the antibody discovery programs undertaken in the collaboration.
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