Trinity County Behavioral Health Services Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1450 Main St, Weaverville, CA 96093 Phone: 530-623-1362 Fax: 530-623-1447 |
County Of Trinity Marriage & Family Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1450 Main St., Weaverville, CA 96093 Phone: 530-623-1362 |
Dennis L Harman Lmft Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 112 Main Street, Weaverville, CA 96093 Phone: 530-410-1893 Fax: 530-623-3007 |
Milestones Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 80b Nugget Lane, Weaverville, CA 96093 Phone: 530-623-3515 Fax: 530-623-1447 |
Trinity Family Therapy Clinic - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 159 Forest Avenue, Weaverville, CA 96093 Phone: 916-541-0313 |
Cedar Home Peer Respite Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 250-b Main Street, Weaverville, CA 96093 Phone: 530-623-1362 |
News Archive
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine report that older adults with diabetes and depression are half as likely to die over a 5-year period when they receive depression care management than depressed patients with diabetes who do not receive depression care management.
Nerve damage from neurodegenerative disease and spinal cord injury has largely been considered irreversible, but Dartmouth researchers report progress in the effort to synthesize rare natural products that promote regeneration and growth of injured nerve cells.
A new, Yale-led study examines shifts in fertility behaviors among Generation X women in the United States - those born between 1965-1982 - compared to their Baby Boomer counterparts, and explores whether the fertility of college-educated women is increasing more quickly across cohorts in Generation X than the fertility of their less educated counterparts.
Approximately 5,000 families (pregnant women, fathers and newborns) are being asked to take part in a new study called Étude 3-D (Découvrir, Développer, Devenir) that is aimed at understanding the effects of perinatal events on child development. The study is directed by Dr. William Fraser, Associate Director of Clinical Research at the CHU Sainte-Justine and professor of Medicine at the University of Montreal.
The rate at which women get called back for additional imaging after screening mammography may be higher at hospitals than at community office practices, mostly due to differences among the patients, according to a new study published online in the journal Radiology. The findings highlight the limitations of recall rates as a quality measure for breast cancer screening, the researchers said.
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