Amber Michelle Arnsten, LVN Licensed Vocational Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 250 N See Vee Lane, Bishop, CA 93514 Phone: 760-873-8461 Fax: 760-873-3935 |
Ms. Karen Marie Howard, Licensed Vocational Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 52 N Tu Su Ln, Bishop, CA 93514 Phone: 760-873-8461 Fax: 760-873-3530 |
Crystal Lynn Lopez, LVN Licensed Vocational Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 250 N See Vee Lane, Bishop, CA 93514 Phone: 760-873-8461 Fax: 760-873-3935 |
News Archive
About 30 years ago, Dr. Richard Sifers set out on a journey to discover why people with a rare condition known as alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency present with high variation in the severity of liver disease.
The age-old parental struggle of convincing youngsters to eat their fruits and vegetables has some new allies: Power Punch Broccoli, X-Ray Vision Carrots - and a host of catchy names for entrees in school cafeterias. Cornell University researchers studied how a simple change, such as using attractive names, would influence elementary-aged children's consumption of vegetables.
Apollo Health Street, a developer of world-class solutions that tackle healthcare's toughest financial challenges, announced today a new agreement with Hartford Healthcare Corporation in Hartford, Connecticut to perform a third party insurance follow-up project in conjunction with a zero balance recovery audit.
The first large-scale clinical trial to study liver transplantation between people with HIV has begun at clinical centers across the United States. The HOPE in Action Multicenter Liver Study will determine the safety of this practice by evaluating liver recipients for potential transplant-related and HIV-related complications following surgery.
The Washington Post examines the influence of commercial interests on the "political declaration" that emerged from this week's U.N. High-level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) in New York. NCDs "are the globe's biggest health problem, responsible for 63 percent of all deaths each year, with incidence growing steeply in the low-income, rapidly urbanizing nations of the world," but they "are deeply entangled with important global industries, not only tobacco but also food, pharmaceuticals, advertising, transportation and construction," the newspaper writes.
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