Dr. Toni A. Price, DO Family Medicine - Geriatric Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6349 Highway 550, Cuba, NM 87013 Phone: 575-289-3291 Fax: 575-289-3648 |
Dr. Kim Samuel Young, D.O. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6349 Us Hwy 550, Cuba, NM 87013 Phone: 575-289-3291 Fax: 505-722-7470 |
Dr. Suzanne Elaine Norman, D.O. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6349 Us Highway 550, Cuba, NM 87013 Phone: 505-289-3291 Fax: 505-289-3390 |
Dr. Richard Lande Kozoll, M.D., M.P.H. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6362 Main Street, Cuba, NM 87013 Phone: 505-289-3326 Fax: 505-289-3390 |
Dr. Tim Garcia, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6349 Highway 550, Cuba, NM 87013 Phone: 505-289-3291 Fax: 505-289-9101 |
Dr. Frances Louise Chavez, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 9837 Us Hwy 550, Cuba, NM 87013 Phone: 575-289-3291 Fax: 575-289-3648 |
News Archive
Specific impairments within six large-scale brain networks during drug cue exposure, decision-making, inhibitory control, and social-emotional processing are associated with drug addiction behaviors, according to a systematic review of more than 100 published neuroimaging studies by experts at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and published Wednesday, June 6 in the journal Neuron.
Researchers at the University of Toronto, St. Michael's Hospital and Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre have discovered a previously unidentified form of circulation within the human eye which may provide important new insights into glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness.
"Philippine authorities are warning of the spread of diseases in cramped evacuation centers, days after flash floods hit the southern Philippines and claimed more than a thousand lives," ABC/Asia Pacific News reports, noting that flooding also has affected the country's northern provinces, displacing at least 50,000 people.
Patients with chest pain are recognized as being at high risk of subsequent adverse cardiac events when their plasma levels of cardiac troponin are elevated as evidence of myocardial damage.
The presence of the bacterium Kingella kingae in children's throats was strongly linked to bone and joint infection with the same bacterium, according to new research published in CMAJ.
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