Ann Bethea Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2300 Center Hill Dr Bldg Ii, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-742-2112 Fax: 334-742-2840 |
Mr. Jakob F Jensen, LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2108 Executive Park Dr, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-610-1731 |
Mrs. Tiama Lamia Rucker Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1375 Mccoy St, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 909-565-0956 |
Karl Christensen Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2300 Center Hill Dr Bldg 2, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-742-2112 |
Caroline May Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2300 Center Hill Dr Bldg I, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-742-2112 |
Ms. Linda Pauline Wilkins, MFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2813 Pepperell Pkwy, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-741-8007 Fax: 334-741-8810 |
Sarah Armstrong Cox, LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2300 Center Hill Dr, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-742-2112 |
Carla Hamler, LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2300 Center Hill Dr, Opelika, AL 36801 Phone: 334-742-2700 |
News Archive
CryoLife, Inc., an implantable biological medical device and cardiovascular tissue processing company, today announced that its BioGlue Surgical Adhesive has launched in Japan and is expected to be available in hospitals by late May 2011.
A gas that gives rotten eggs their distinctive odour could one day form the basis of new cardiovascular therapies.
Science professionals, doctoral and postdoctoral students from across the country will gather May 20 through 27 at the MDI Biological Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, for an intensive one-week course in Quantitative Fluorescence Microscopy.
An international team of researchers has found that certain bioactive components found in human milk are associated with a reduced risk of HIV transmission from an HIV infected mother to her breast-fed infant. Their study will be published in the August 15 online edition of American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The discovery, reported on April 13 in the online version of Nature, could open the door to an entirely new strategy for preventing the spread of HIV infection in the body's cells, according to the senior author of the study, Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology Director Warner C. Greene, MD, PhD.
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