Kyan Erin Berry, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1631 S Atherton St Ste 201, State College, PA 16801 Phone: 814-235-9583 |
Jennifer Pisch, LPN Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1 Eisenhower Drive, State College, PA 16801 Phone: 814-865-2755 |
Nikki Louise Rosellini, Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 428 Student Health Ctr, State College, PA 16802 Phone: 814-863-0774 |
Kathy Jane Jeffries, Licensed Practical Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 220 Student Health Ctr, State College, PA 16802 Phone: 814-865-4847 |
News Archive
A study of 167 amateur runners at the 2006 and 2007 Berlin marathons is lowering concerns that this type of activity leads to sustained heart damage, particularly among older competitors. Marathons are becoming an increasingly popular challenge for amateur runners wanting to test their endurance over the classic 26-mile distance. The medical community, however, has long been concerned about how marathons impact the heart - and it has not yet been shown if the effects vary among different age groups or genders.
In a national population-based study of 16,036 lung cancer patients, Hispanics with curable stage I lung cancer had poorer lung cancer specific survival rates, as well as worse all-cause mortality, than a much larger group of white persons. Study results will appear in the second issue for May 2005 of the American Thoracic Society's peer-reviewed American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
Democratic leaders in the Senate are mulling passing a "clean" bill - one with no other policy changes - that would increase the nation's debt limit. House Republican leadership continues to refuse any proposal that doesn't strike some parts of the new health law. In the meantime, talk about the government shutdown sometimes ignores the health law's role in it.
In the quest to arrest the growth and spread of tumors, there have been many attempts to get cancer genes to ignore their internal instruction manual. In a new study, a team led by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute scientists has created the first molecule able to prevent cancer genes from "hearing" those instructions, stifling the cancer process at its root.
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