Nancy Parry Md., Pc, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: Box 2359, Ketchum, ID 83340 Phone: 208-622-3180 Fax: 208-622-3190 |
Tracey L Busby, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 Hospital Drive, Suite 105, Ketchum, ID 83340 Phone: 208-622-8811 Fax: 208-622-6921 |
Randall T Hermann, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 208 Spruce St ., Ketchum, ID 83340 Phone: 208-726-9781 Fax: 208-726-1377 |
Kathleen Egan Haisley, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 100 Hospital Drive, Ketchum, ID 83340 Phone: 208-727-8100 |
News Archive
Although many specialized hospitals deliver better and faster services in cardiac care and other specialties, a paper being presented at the annual meeting of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS-) maintains that these hospitals cherry-pick patients to achieve these results, and that average patients actually receive worse care.
By exploiting type 1 interferon's ability to foster an antagonistic cellular environment for viral replication, a research group from France pinpointed DEAD-box RNA helicase DDX42 as an intrinsic inhibitor of HIV, but also other pathogenic viruses such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and Chikungunya virus.
Marking the 10th anniversary of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1325 the first to recognize the importance of women's 'full involvement' in efforts to maintain and promote peace and security Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday together with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and diplomats called for increased action to end sexual violence in war and increase women's involvement in peace-building efforts, the Associated Press/Forbes reports.
Reuters: "The pandemic of swine flu may be hitting a peak in the United States, health experts said on Friday. But they stressed that influenza, especially a pandemic, could hit several peaks in a single season. They said weeks or months more of disease could be expected.
The University of Illinois at Chicago received $8.2 million from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism to continue the Center for Alcohol Research in Epigenetics and its research on how alcohol affects genes through epigenetics - chemical changes to DNA, RNA or proteins that alter the expression of genes without directly modifying them.
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