Dr. Scott Elliott Blattman, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6101 Woodway Dr, Ste 200, Woodway, TX 76712 Phone: 254-537-6300 Fax: 254-537-6301 |
Stefan Reid Huber, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 9111 Jordan Lane, Suite 300, Woodway, TX 76712 Phone: 254-253-2855 Fax: 254-294-8413 |
Dr. Todd Eric Blattman, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6101 Woodway Dr, Ste 200, Woodway, TX 76712 Phone: 254-537-6300 Fax: 254-537-6301 |
Natalie Lippe, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6101 Woodway Dr, Ste 200, Woodway, TX 76712 Phone: 254-537-6300 Fax: 254-537-6301 |
News Archive
Throughout her career in Canada and the UK, Dr. Laura Magee has taken a restrained approach to use of blood pressure-lowering medication in her pregnant patients, fearing that lowering pressure could reduce the flow of blood and vital nutrients to their babies.
Just because many businesses are open again doesn't mean the pandemic is over. The coronavirus is still on the loose — actually surging in many locations — which means people have to make serious choices about their health all day, every day.
Kaiser Health News examines rural health care in Kentucky and finds that models for community health care that operate there could benefit the nation's health care system despite. The article notes that Hazard, Ky., was labeled as one of the worst health care regions in America by the 2008 American Human Development Report, but "there are enduring models in places like Hazard that could prove instructive to rebuilding healthy communities across the nation, both rural and urban."
New research has been published that focuses on the characterization of innate and adaptive immune responses in adult patients with different degrees of severity and also in pediatric patients with mild symptoms of COVID-19. In this study, researchers have developed an immune profile in children to understand the difference in COVID-19 infection in children and adults.
Mammalian fatty acid synthase is one of the most complex molecular synthetic machines in human cells. It is also a promising target for the development of anti-cancer and anti-obesity drugs and the treatment of metabolic disorders. Now researchers at ETH Zurich have determined the atomic structure of a mammalian fatty acid synthase. Their results have just been published in Science magazine.
› Verified 6 days ago