![]() Southeast Alabama Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1108 Ross Clark Circle, Dothan, Alabama 36301 Ratings: Phone: (334) 793-8701 |
![]() Marshall Medical Centers Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2505 U S Highway 431 North, Boaz, Alabama 35957 Ratings: Phone: (256) 593-8310 |
![]() North Alabama Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1701 Veterans Drive, Florence, Alabama 35630 Ratings: Phone: (256) 768-8400 |
![]() Mizell Memorial Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 702 N Main St, Opp, Alabama 36467 Ratings: Phone: (334) 493-3541 |
![]() Crenshaw Community Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 101 Hospital Circle, Luverne, Alabama 36049 Ratings: Phone: (334) 335-3374 |
![]() St. Vincent's East Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 50 Medical Park East Drive, Birmingham, Alabama 35235 Ratings: Phone: (205) 838-3122 |
![]() Dekalb Regional Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 200 Med Center Drive, Fort Payne, Alabama 35968 Ratings: Phone: (256) 845-3150 |
![]() Shelby Baptist Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1000 First Street North, Alabaster, Alabama 35007 Ratings: Phone: (205) 620-8100 |
![]() Callahan Eye Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1720 University Blvd, Suite 500, Birmingham, Alabama 35233 Ratings:NA Phone: (205) 325-8100 |
![]() Helen Keller Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1300 South Montgomery Avenue, Sheffield, Alabama 35660 Ratings: Phone: (256) 386-4556 |
![]() Dale Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 126 Hospital Ave, Ozark, Alabama 36360 Ratings: Phone: (334) 774-2601 |
![]() Cherokee Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 400 Northwood Dr, Centre, Alabama 35960 Ratings:NA Phone: (256) 927-5531 |
![]() Baptist Medical Center South Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2105 East South Boulevard, Montgomery, Alabama 36116 Ratings: Phone: (334) 288-2100 |
![]() Jackson Hospital & Clinic Inc Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1725 Pine Street, Montgomery, Alabama 36106 Ratings: Phone: (334) 293-8000 |
![]() East Alabama Medical Center And Snf Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2000 Pepperell Parkway, Opelika, Alabama 36801 Ratings: Phone: (334) 749-3411 |
![]() University Of Alabama Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 619 South 19th Street, Birmingham, Alabama 35233 Ratings: Phone: (205) 934-4011 |
![]() Community Hospital Inc Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 805 Friendship Road, Tallassee, Alabama 36078 Ratings: Phone: (334) 283-6541 |
![]() Cullman Regional Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1912 Alabama Highway 157, Cullman, Alabama 35058 Ratings: Phone: (256) 737-2000 |
![]() Andalusia Health Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 849 South Three Notch Street, Andalusia, Alabama 36420 Ratings: Phone: (334) 222-8466 |
![]() Stringfellow Memorial Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 301 East 18th St, Anniston, Alabama 36201 Ratings: Phone: (256) 235-8900 |
News Archive
The Georgia Department of Community Health board on Thursday approved a plan to charge commercial HMOs the same fee as managed care companies that operate the state's Medicaid program in an effort to make up for a 5% reduction in program funding, the Savannah Morning News reports.
A growing collection of anecdotal stories raises the possibility that nerve injury in an arm or a leg can act as a trigger for the development amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS - a progressive neurodegenerative disease also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, named after the famous New York Yankee who died of it in 1941.
"Afghanistan has begun work on a $30 million hospital for the treatment of tuberculosis [TB], a disease that health officials say kills more than 10,000 Afghans every year," VOA's "Breaking News" blog reports.
New research from the University of Melbourne shows how the malaria parasite (Plasmodium falciparum) changes into a banana shape before sexual reproduction, a finding that could provide targets for vaccine or drug development and may explain how the parasite evades the human immune system.
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