Ida Ripley, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5161 S Cottonwood St, Ste 130, Murray, UT 84157 Phone: 801-507-7070 Fax: 801-507-7089 |
Dr. Martha S Nightingale, CNM, DNP Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 5063 Cottonwood St Ste 130, Murray, UT 84107 Phone: 801-971-2741 |
Ms. Deanne R Williams, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5121 S Cottonwood Street, Murray, UT 84157 Phone: 801-634-2114 |
Melissa K Dean, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 869 E Three Fountains Dr Unit 237, Murray, UT 84107 Phone: 801-815-0478 |
News Archive
We meet a multitude of people on a daily basis: the nice waitress in the coffee shop around the corner, the bus driver or the colleagues at the office. Without the ability to recognize faces at first glance we would not be able to distinguish between people. Monkeys also possess the remarkable ability to differentiate faces of group members and to extract the relevant information about the individual directly from the face.
Generex Biotechnology Corporation announced today that the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary Antigen Express, Inc. presented an update of the ongoing Phase 2 trial with an off-the-shelf immunotherapeutic cancer vaccine, AE37, in patients with breast cancer at Cambridge Healthtech Institute's Sixth Annual ImVacS: The Immunotherapeutics and Vaccine Summit held August 16-18, 2011 in Cambridge, MA.
HIV has eluded vaccine-makers for thirty years, in part due to the virus' extreme ability to mutate. Physical scientists and clinical virologists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Ragon Institute in Cambridge, Mass., have identified a promising strategy for vaccine design using a mathematical technique that has also been used in problems related to quantum physics, as well as in analyses of stock market price fluctuations and studies of enzyme sequences.
The 20 proteins in the Wnt family are some of the most important proteins in controlling how an organism develops and grows, but for 30 years scientists have not known what these vital proteins actually look like. The proteins have eluded standard visualization techniques, in large part because they do not dissolve well in the water-based liquids normally used for biochemical studies.
For years policymakers have attempted to replace Medicare's fee-for- service payment system with approaches that pay one price for an aggregation of services. The intent has been to reward providers for offering needed care in the most appropriate and cost-effective manner. But many of these programs have known pitfalls, says Stuart Altman, an economist and the Sol C. Chaikin Professor of National Health Policy at the Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University.
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