Clear Counseling Llc Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1839 Pearl Rd, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 330-548-3710 |
Center Of Balance Behavioral Health, Llc Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3361 James Blvd, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 330-636-8340 |
Infinity Counseling, Llc Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1839 Pearl Rd, 202, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 330-220-9679 Fax: 844-630-5832 |
Universal Medical Ancillary Services Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3065 Nationwide Pkwy, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 440-243-5914 Fax: 440-243-6530 |
Janus Counseling Group Counselor - Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1839 Pearl Rd, Suite 103, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 330-220-9679 |
Compass Health Services Inc Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1839 Pearl Rd, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 440-554-6443 |
Ever Calm Counseling Llc Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 912 N Carpenter Rd, Brunswick, OH 44212 Phone: 216-200-8637 |
News Archive
Northeast Pennsylvanians often think that excellent cancer care is found strictly in larger cities. However, that perception was recently disproved by Scranton's own Northeast Radiation Oncology Center (NROC).
A biochemistry research team led by Dr. Andrew H.-J. Wang and Dr. Ting-Fang Wang at the Institute of Biological Chemistry, Academia Sinica(IBCAS), has discovered that the RecA family recombinases function as a new type of rotary motor proteins to repair DNA damages.
As part of an effort to understand how an experimental drug for atherosclerosis causes the build-up of fat in the liver, scientists have developed a computer model that can predict how the rate at which liver stores fat in response to various situations. Being able to model liver fat storage gives researchers a way to predict the side effects of drugs and environmental factors at much earlier stages in the research and drug development process, possibly reducing the number of experiments involving animal models.
Swedish researchers at Uppsala University and the Karolinska Institute have found that genes that control the biological clocks in cells throughout the body are altered after losing a single night of sleep, in a study that is to be published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
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