Christian Care Home Health & Hospice Medicare Approved Location: 1000 Wiggins Parkway, Mesquite, Texas 75150 Phone: (972) 686-3753 |
Magnolia Hospice Medicare Approved Location: 3939 Us Hwy 80 Suite 375, Mesquite, Texas 75150 Phone: (214) 275-6200 |
Agape Hospice Care Medicare Approved Location: 3030 Town Centre Drive Suite 200, Mesquite, Texas 75150 Phone: (972) 279-1000 |
Angel Hospice Corp Medicare Approved Location: 208 W Kearney Ste 103, Mesquite, Texas 75149 Phone: (214) 432-2636 |
Pegasus Hospice Llc Medicare Approved Location: 3939 Us 80 Highway Suite 202, Mesquite, Texas 75150 Phone: (972) 270-0048 |
Doctors Hospice Inc Medicare Approved Location: 3635 Us Hwy 80 E, Mesquite, Texas 75150 Phone: (972) 681-1000 |
News Archive
Mount Sinai has officially opened a new center to treat and research tic and obsessive-compulsive disorders (OCD) in individuals of all ages. The opening coincides with a significant revision in the psychiatry field's manual of mental disorders, which will now recognize OCD with its own category, rather than classifying it as an anxiety disorder.
Phase 3 results presented today at The International Liver Congress 2015 show that a combination of daclatasvir (DCV), sofosbuvir (SOF) and ribavirin (RBV) for 12 weeks was effective and well tolerated amongst patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with advanced cirrhosis and post-transplant recurrence.
Saudi and UK scientists provide the most detailed picture yet of the clinical and laboratory characteristics of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) coronavirus, revealing a wide range of clinical symptoms and an extremely high death rate among patients with co-existing medical conditions.
Everyday exposure to obesity-promoting chemicals (obesogens) represents a significant risk to public health, and needs stronger regulation to minimize exposure and protect people's health, according to evidence presented today at the 59th Annual European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology Meeting.
A new study published in the journal Nature Medicine by NYU Cancer Institute researchers, shows how the cancer causing gene Notch, in combination with a mutated Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) protein complex, work together to cause T- cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
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