Monica K Sullivan, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy Ste N, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-6255 Fax: 859-547-1197 |
Jeremy M Johnston, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-6255 Fax: 859-547-1197 |
Benjamin Paul Smith, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy Ste N, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-6255 Fax: 859-547-1197 |
Shelby Michael Gardner, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-6255 Fax: 859-547-1197 |
Maria Burton, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy Ste N, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-6255 Fax: 859-547-1197 |
Asha Sharma, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-6255 Fax: 859-547-1197 |
Dr. Augusta Malin Rawlins-rader, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1955 Dixie Hwy, Ft Wright, KY 41011 Phone: 859-341-5757 Fax: 859-331-4757 |
News Archive
Scientists supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health, have for the first time identified genes that might increase a person's ability to abstain from smoking.
A Mayo Clinic-led study involving 488 cardiac patients whose cases were followed for up to 12 years finds that microvascular endothelial dysfunction, a common early sign of cardiovascular disease, is associated with a greater than twofold risk of cancer.
Normally, bird flu viruses do not spread easily from person to person. But if this does happen, it could trigger a pandemic. Researchers from the MDC and RKI have now explained in the journal Nature Communications what makes the leap from animals to humans less likely.
Turning to the Internet to find out what ails you is common, but for folks who have trouble handling uncertainty, "cyberchondria" - the online counterpart to hypochondria - worsens as they seek answers, a Baylor University researcher says.
Tulane University's Laura Schrader, a cell and molecular biology professor and Brain Institute member, received a two-year grant from the National Institute of Health to study the role of a Shox2, a protein in the brain important for development and function of the thalamus.
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