Dr. Cullen Michael Ocmond, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1645 Lutcher Ave, Lutcher, LA 70071 Phone: 225-869-9890 Fax: 225-869-3822 |
Dr. Jerry M Poche, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1645 Lutcher Ave, Lutcher, LA 70071 Phone: 225-869-3493 Fax: 225-869-9333 |
Dr. Randall C Poche, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1645 Lutcher Ave, Lutcher, LA 70071 Phone: 225-869-3493 Fax: 225-869-9333 |
Dr. Carl J Poche, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2454 Louisiana Ave, Lutcher, LA 70071 Phone: 225-869-3493 Fax: 225-869-9333 |
News Archive
Federal regulators have approved a state plan to pay hospitals an additional $87 million this year for the care they provide to low-income Ohioans on Medicaid. The funds will be disbursed to hospitals by the end of this month. The bulk payment and a 5 percent increase in Medicaid reimbursement fees effective in October were included in last year's state budget to let hospitals recoup some of the money they were losing through a new state franchise fee. The fee is projected to cost hospitals statewide $718 million over the two-year budget ending June 30, 2011.
Lockheed Martin has won a $47.8 million contract to develop and integrate software applications for the Department of Defense's Theater Medical Information Program (TMIP), Block 2.
The Trinity Infection Prevention team from Iowa/Illinois Trinity Medical Center has come up with the novel idea of using duct tape to reduce infections and save up to $110,000. For this they received the Blue Ribbon Abstract Award. They presented their work, "The Red Box Strategy: An Innovative Method to Improve Isolation Precaution Compliance and Reduce Costs" which received the designation at the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology's 2011 Annual Conference and International Meeting June27-29 in Baltimore.
A global consortium representing 27 institutions has published findings comparing mortality in the previous five years to deaths between January and August 2020 in the first wave of the pandemic.
Deaf or blind people often report enhanced abilities in their remaining senses, but up until now, no one has explained how and why that could be. Researchers at The University of Western Ontario, led by Stephen Lomber of The Centre for Brain and Mind have discovered there is a causal link between enhanced visual abilities and reorganization of the part of the brain that usually handles auditory input in congenitally deaf cats. The findings, published online in Nature Neuroscience, provide insight into the plasticity that may occur in the brains of deaf people.
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