University Of New Mexico Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 2211 Lomas Boulevard Ne, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Ratings: Phone: (505) 272-2111 |
Lovelace Medical Center Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 601 Dr Martin Luther King Jr Ave Ne, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102 Ratings: Phone: (505) 727-8000 |
Lovelace Women's Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 4701 Montgomery Boulevard Ne, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109 Ratings: Phone: (505) 727-7805 |
Presbyterian Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 1100 Central Avenue Se, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Ratings: Phone: (505) 724-8386 |
Lovelace Westside Hospital Acute Care Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 10501 Golf Course Road Nw, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87114 Ratings: Phone: (505) 727-2001 |
Haven Behavioral Hospital Of Albuquerque Psychiatric Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 5400 Gibson Boulevard Se, 4th Floor Box# 8, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87108 Ratings:NA Phone: (505) 254-4500 |
Central Desert Behavioral Health Center Psychiatric Hospital (Medicare Certified) Location: 239 Elm Street Ne, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102 Ratings:NA Phone: (505) 243-3387 |
News Archive
A Yorkshire heart-monitor company is one of five technology businesses hoping to raise finance at the White Rose Bioscience Forum, Yorkshire's flagship bioscience event - in York today (01 November 2005).
The Medical University of South Carolina's Hollings Cancer Center received an $8.9 million grant from the National Cancer Institute designed to foster collaboration across clinical and laboratory research for the study of signaling in sphingolipids, a class of lipids known to be involved in the growth of solid tumor cancers.
The human body is comprised of billions of cells. Yet it functions and grows as a single organism, because of trillions of interactions that help various cells recognize and respond to each other via different molecules on their surface or inside the cells. Now, a new study published in the journal Nature in April 2020 describes the first-ever interactome map, to help distinguish healthy interactions and disease-producing ones.
Initial findings from a study looking at the longer-term impact of COVID-19 has found that a large proportion COVID-19 patients discharged from hospital were still experiencing symptoms of breathlessness, fatigue, anxiety and depression two to three months after contracting the virus.
› Verified 3 days ago