Dr. Rebecca Hodges, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 707 Alberta Dr, Winona, MS 38967 Phone: 662-283-3655 |
Kayla Mccormick, FNP Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 707 Alberta Dr, Winona, MS 38967 Phone: 662-283-3655 |
Dr. Steven Dewayne Gammel, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 408 Tyler Holmes Dr, Winona, MS 38967 Phone: 662-283-8205 |
Dr. Steven Keith Rushing, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 700 Woodland Dr, Winona, MS 38967 Phone: 662-283-3060 Fax: 662-283-3553 |
News Archive
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today announced the award of $2.9 million to support six research projects that will help with the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of tuberculosis (TB).
Active ingredients ranging from weight-loss herbals to cancer-killing cytotoxics attract billions in venture investment dollars every year. But technologies designed to selectively deliver active ingredients to targeted locations are beginning to gain momentum, as their application in drugs, medical devices, food, personal care, and agricultural chemicals rapidly grows and corporate venture investors take notice, according to a new report from Lux Research.
Everyone will be thinking about energy efficiency and resource management in Davos from the 14th to the 16th September. The primary aim of the R'09 Conference, now being held for the ninth time, is to improve the material usage and energy efficiency of manufactured products, services and processes, whether during the production, usage or even the recycling phases.
Because I've lived so long with anxiety, there were lots of things I figured I'd never, ever do -; having children was one of them. In fact, in my 20s, before I'd managed to stumble on the combination of drugs and exercise that allows me to be as sane as I can expect to be, I was so sure I'd never give birth that I got a tattoo of a giant koi fish extending from one end of my abdomen to the other. ... I found myself in a very ironic situation: my decision to have a child was the result of a sense of stability I enjoyed due to taking an array of anti-anxiety medications that I would be strongly advised by most doctors to stop taking now that I was pregnant (Alissa Nutting, 6/23).
Blocking a factor that can activate the human immune response against intestinal bacteria or certain foods could prevent the development of celiac disease in those most at risk, researchers report in the journal Nature.
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