Jerry Liles, D.O. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1009 E 6th St, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-668-8888 |
Carlos Rafael Elizondo, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 230 S Gulf St, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-664-0303 Fax: 866-845-0933 |
Dr. Oscar Reynolds Jr., MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 700 Flournoy Rd, Suite 2a, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-664-1417 Fax: 361-664-3218 |
Dr. Gustavo E Villarreal, M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2510 E Main St Ste 108, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-661-8105 |
David Carter, Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2500 E Main St, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-661-8000 |
Dr. Beauford Basped Jr., D.O Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 102 E Main St, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-664-6504 Fax: 361-664-6531 |
Dr. Alejandro Lopez Jr., M.D. Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 201 Mariposa, Alice, TX 78332 Phone: 361-664-8811 Fax: 361-664-8992 |
News Archive
The Wall Street Journal reports that the phrase confuses consumers in focus groups. Meanwhile, Papa John's CEO and founder John Schnatter, who is a fundraiser for Mitt Romney, told shareholders last week that the health care law is going to raise the company's costs, which he vowed to pass onto consumers.
NPR's Car Talk guys, Tom and Ray Magliozzi, may be a couple of motor mouths, but they always put a lid on using cell phones behind the wheel. The perennial jokesters confirm their serious commitment to addressing the issue of devices that take a driver's focus off the road by teaming with the University of Utah to launch the Driver Distraction Center at their web site: cartalk.com/distraction.
The absence of standardized definitions for events and outcomes during and after anesthesia for surgery has major implications for anesthesiology research and practice, as well as for public perceptions of anesthesia care, according to an editorial by two leading anesthesiology researchers.
At least since the movie "The Fantastic Voyage" in 1966, in which a submarine is shrunk down and injected into the blood stream of a human, people have been toying with the idea of sending tiny "micromachines" and "nanorobots" into our organs or individual cells to carry out delicate "repairs".
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