Mrs. Gloria Jean Hazard, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 501 E Hospital Ln, Suite 101, Terre Haute, IN 47802 Phone: 812-234-0707 Fax: 812-234-3352 |
Donna Lynn Strole, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 110 W Honey Creek Pkwy, Terre Haute, IN 47802 Phone: 812-232-2890 Fax: 812-232-3506 |
Laurie Arbuckle, Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1850 Howard Wayne Dr, Terre Haute, IN 47802 Phone: 812-232-0406 |
Helen Frances Mcqueary, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 110 W Honey Creek Pkwy, Terre Haute, IN 47802 Phone: 812-232-2890 |
News Archive
As a person ages, the ability of their beta cells to divide and make new beta cells declines. By the time children reach the age of 10 to 12 years, the ability of their insulin-producing cells to replicate greatly diminishes. If these cells, called beta cells, are destroyed-as they are in type 1 diabetes-treatment with the hormone insulin becomes essential to regulate blood glucose levels and get energy from food.
Just in time for Veterans Day, the embattled secretary of Veterans Affairs, Eric K. Shinseki, announced last week that his department had reduced its backlog of overdue disability claims from more than 600,000 in March to about 400,000. "The trend line is in the right direction," Shinseki told reporters, noting that the VA had cut the number of claims older than a year by 93%. With hundreds of thousands of cases still unresolved, Shinseki hasn't gotten much credit so far -; but to the surprise of his critics, he's on track to achieve his goal of eliminating the backlog by 2015. Still, that won't solve all the VA's problems; far from it (Doyle McManus, 11/10).
Study results released today at the Society of NeuroInterventional Surgery 8th Annual Meeting reveals that treatment costs for some neurovascular conditions remain higher than reimbursement in the form of Medicare payments.
Despite modest overall improvements in breast cancer survival rates for women with advanced disease over the last two decades, the rates for black women have not improved and the difference in life expectancy between white and black women continues to widen, according to researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.
Skin cells from a patient with an inherited heart disease were the seeds of a stem cell experiment that could help researchers test specific treatments for the disease, known as long QT syndrome. The research results appear in the January 16 issue of the journal Nature.
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