Melissa Whitesell Black, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 102 Handley Park Ct, Goldsboro, NC 27534 Phone: 919-734-3344 |
Bonnie Mae Bruce, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 102 Handley Park Ct, Goldsboro, NC 27534 Phone: 919-734-3344 Fax: 919-735-3025 |
Brittany Springle Heath, Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 102 Handley Park Ct, Goldsboro, NC 27534 Phone: 919-734-3344 |
Jomeka B Mowery, MSN, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 102 Handley Park Ct, Goldsboro, NC 27534 Phone: 919-734-3344 Fax: 919-735-3025 |
Virginia L Wade, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 102 Handley Park Ct, Goldsboro, NC 27534 Phone: 919-734-3344 Fax: 919-735-3025 |
Cher Alexis Durham, CNM, WHNP-BC Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 102 Handley Park Ct, Goldsboro, NC 27534 Phone: 919-734-3344 Fax: 919-735-3025 |
News Archive
Today, Dole Food Company and Lt. Governor Casey Cagle's Healthy Kids Georgia Program announced a partnership with the Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning to promote good nutrition and increased physical activity in early childcare and education programs.
Communities on Facebook that distrust establishment health guidance are more effective than government health agencies and other reliable health groups at reaching and engaging "undecided" individuals, according to a study published today in the journal Nature.
Substituting sugar-sweetened drinks with artificially sweetened alternatives could help reduce weight gain in schoolchildren, research suggests.
A new study is the first to produce evidence that exercise improves the prospects of beating a malignancy, and proves that being physically active boosts the odds that breast cancer patients will survive the disease.
Despite progress in raising the vaccination rates in the world's poorest countries, some countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia and Nigeria continue to have vaccination rates "below 50% in certain regions, compared with the 80% or more needed to achieve a low risk of the disease spreading," Douglas Holt, Oxford University professor of marketing, and Jacob McKnight, also of Oxford University, write in a Livemint.com analysis piece.
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