Donna Lockhart-philip, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4007 Diamond Ruby, Christiansted, VI 00820 Phone: 340-772-7349 Fax: 340-772-7427 |
Jane Bruno, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4007 Estate Diamond Ruby, Christiansted, VI 00820 Phone: 340-778-6311 |
Brittany Grace Victoria Dawson, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4007 Estate Diamond Ruby, Christiansted, VI 00820 Phone: 340-778-6311 |
Mrs. Amie Francisca Noelise Bannis, CNM Advanced Practice Midwife Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4007 Estate Diamond Ruby, Christiansted, VI 00820 Phone: 340-772-7349 |
News Archive
Public hospitals across Hawaii are finding ways to reduce staff and cut services because they don't have enough money to make ends meet. Executives from the Hawaii Health Systems Corp. told lawmakers Friday that even after layoffs they are facing a $30 million deficit in 2015. One hospital on Maui chose to close its adolescent psychology unit because it couldn't sustain the appropriate staffing levels to provide the services. It's also considering cuts to oncology and dialysis services if the situation doesn't improve (9/20).
A group of researchers from the University of Louisville, Japan and Austria is the first to identify a protein, AF1q, associated with multiple myeloma and a condition that occurs in approximately one-fourth of very aggressive multiple myeloma, extramedullary disease or EMD.
USA Today reports on Margaret Sabin, CEO of Penrose Hospital in Colorado Springs, who is leading, by example, the employer wellness movement to make employees healthier. "Something of a renegade in her line of work, she believes hospitals — all in the medical community, in fact — are applying too little attention and resources to prevention. 'We can project exactly what will happen to an individual living an unhealthy lifestyle,' she says.
A study conducted by researchers at Northwestern University, Chicago, has found that the placentas of pregnant women who were infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2) showed abnormalities, compared with those of uninfected women.
Researchers led by Steven R. Wilson of Purdue University videotaped forty mothers as they completed a ten minute play period with one of their children between the ages of three and eight years. The mothers then completed a series of questionnaires including the Verbal Aggressiveness Scale.
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