Tradewinds Counseling Services, Llc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 124 Meadville St, Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 814-240-2955 Fax: 866-764-9624 |
Mindful Paths Llc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 124 Meadville St, Suite 105, Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 844-977-2847 Fax: 844-717-2847 |
Pathways Nwpa Llc Social Worker - Clinical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 12634 Angling Rd Ste F, Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 814-273-9229 Fax: 814-260-4276 |
Edinboro Counseling And Psychological Services Psychologist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 7052 Route 6n, Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 814-734-3975 Fax: 814-734-1265 |
Gecac D&a Services Community/Behavioral Health Agency Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Edinboro University Of Pa, Ghering Health Center, Edinboro, PA 16444 Phone: 814-734-1218 Fax: 814-734-2666 |
Edinboro Counseling And Psychological Services Counselor - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7052 Route 6n, Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 814-734-3975 Fax: 814-734-1265 |
Evolve Professional Counseling Services, Llc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 111 Walker Dr Unit A, Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 814-734-0199 Fax: 814-734-0196 |
News Archive
Researchers at the University of Louisville were part of a group that discovered an insidious new autoimmune disease that causes kidney failure.
A new editorial published by an International Osteoporosis Foundation Working Group urges physicians to individualize treatment decisions based on their patients' fracture risk, rather than automatically interrupting or stopping bisphosphonate therapy after five or three years.
A study has found that anorexia nervosa may have a metabolic component that makes some patients lose weight more easily and be harder to treat.
Ex-prisoners with a history of risky drug use, mental illness or poverty are more likely to end up back behind bars. Those who are obese, are chronically ill or have attempted suicide are more likely to remain in the community. These are some of the findings from an exploratory study into health-related factors that could be used to predict whether a person released from prison will end up in custody again.
"Vaccines are among the greatest scientific contributions to human welfare. They are also some of the largest humanitarian contributions of developed nations to the rest of the world. So it is unfortunate that a decade of vaccine controversy has overshadowed a decade of vaccine miracles," Washington Post columnist Michael Gerson writes in an opinion piece reflecting on the contributions of the GAVI Alliance over the past decade.
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