Jody Lyn Brewer, MFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 246 Peaceful Ln, Easley, SC 29640 Phone: 661-203-4022 |
Kimberly M. Chastain, LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 406 Piedmont Rd Ste 2, Easley, SC 29642 Phone: 864-220-1177 Fax: 864-220-1102 |
Mrs. Sharon Louise Newsome, MFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 112 John St Ste 101, Easley, SC 29640 Phone: 864-522-8603 |
William G George, D.MIN. Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 112 John St Ste 102, The Pastoral Counseling Center, Easley, SC 29640 Phone: 864-442-7585 Fax: 864-859-9648 |
Morgan Robinson, MMFT, LMFT Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 407 Basalt Ct, Easley, SC 29642 Phone: 864-704-8394 |
News Archive
A pregnancy is not always a happy event and as many as 10-15 per cent of pregnant women in Denmark have depressive symptoms. Despite years of critical focus on the side effects of antidepressants in the healthcare system, consumption of antidepressants by pregnant women actually increased drastically during the period 1997 to 2011.
Governor Edward G. Rendell today announced Pennsylvania will use nearly $10 million in federal grant funds to improve the quality of health care for children while reducing the cost of services through the use of pediatric electronic health records.
Aalto University, the Finnish Meteorological Institute, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and the University of Helsinki have brought together a multidisciplinary group of researchers to model how the extremely small droplets that leave the respiratory tract when coughing, sneezing or talking are transported in air currents.
Thanks to a new injectable formula, Brazilian researchers have succeeded in enhancing the efficacy and prolonging the duration of action of a drug commonly used to treat joint inflammation.
An international team of researchers, led by scientists at the University of California, San Diego and Yale University schools of medicine, have identified a form of autism with epilepsy that may potentially be treatable with a common nutritional supplement.
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