Pampa Regional Medical Center Hospital Units - Psychiatric Unit Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: One Medical Plaza, Pampa, TX 79065 Phone: 806-663-5600 Fax: 806-663-5655 |
Behavioral Clinic Clinic - Adult Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: One Medical Plaza, Pampa, TX 79065 Phone: 806-665-3721 Fax: 806-665-2361 |
Brighter Day Counseling Services Pllc Counselor - Professional Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 529 N Hobart St, Pampa, TX 79065 Phone: 806-318-9228 |
Pampa Regional Medical Center Clinic - Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: One Medical Plaza, Pampa, TX 79065 Phone: 806-663-5600 Fax: 806-663-5655 |
Chaney Health Pllc Clinic - Adolescent and Children Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 511 W Kentucky Ave Ste 3, Pampa, TX 79065 Phone: 806-463-0910 |
Pampa Regional Medical Center Hospital Units - Psychiatric Unit Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: One Medical Plaza, Pampa, TX 79065 Phone: 806-663-5600 Fax: 806-663-5655 |
News Archive
New research out of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine describes a mechanism by which an essential quality control system in cells identifies and destroys faulty genetic material. The findings were published online December 23 in Nature Communications.
Health-care reform, the impossible dream that seemed to become a reality in 2010, is now in mortal danger. Republicans want to repeal it even though the federal law is patterned after a Massachusetts law that their apparent presidential nominee signed in 2006. They can't do that, of course, unless they sweep the next election. So the clear and present danger comes from the Supreme Court, where a majority of justices seemed to snarl at the law in open session last month. Health-care reform is clearly in legal peril.
In a significant step toward reducing the threat of HIV, UC Merced Professor Patricia LiWang has designed what may be the most effective chemical inhibitor against infection of the virus.
Researchers at the University of Chicago are developing computer-aided diagnosis (CADx) and quantitative image analysis (QIA) methods for mammograms, ultrasounds and magnetic resonance images (MRIs) to identify specific tumor characteristics, including size, shape and sharpness, said lead researcher Maryellen Giger, A.N. Pritzker Professor of Radiology/Medical Physics and director of the Imaging Research Institute at the University of Chicago.
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