Amy Renee Wood I, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 621 3rd St S, Glasgow, MT 59230 Phone: 406-228-3500 Fax: 406-228-3680 |
Jeremy John Stringer, DNP CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 621 3rd St S, Glasgow, MT 59230 Phone: 406-228-3500 |
Thomas Eugene Schultz, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 621 3rd St S, Glasgow, MT 59230 Phone: 406-228-3500 |
Lisa Elaine Ball, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 621 3rd St S, Glasgow, MT 59230 Phone: 406-228-3500 |
Mr. Gerry Eugene Fink, CRNA, MS Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 621 3rd St S, Glasgow, MT 59230 Phone: 406-228-3500 Fax: 406-228-3520 |
News Archive
Researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center believe they have identified a new means of enhancing the body's ability to repair its own cells, which they hope will lead to better diagnosis and treatment of traumatic nerve injuries, like those sustained in car accidents, sports injuries, or in combat.
Major depression and coronary artery disease are only modestly related throughout an individual's lifetime, but studying how the two interact over time and in twin pairs paints a more complex picture of the associations between the conditions, according to a report in the August issue of Archives of General Psychiatry. For example, the association between coronary artery disease onset and major depression risk is much stronger over time than vice versa.
A $1 million grant from KeyBank Foundation to Susan G. Komen for the CureĀ® will fund a training and outreach program potentially reaching more than 100,000 medically underserved women in selected communities that KeyBank serves. The grant, announced today by Susan G. Komen for the Cure and KeyCorp, is the Foundation's largest-ever grant at the national level and will be used to establish the Susan G. Komen Lay Health Advisors Training Program.
Residential treatment may be an appropriate first-line option for young adults who are dependent on opioid drugs - including prescription painkillers and heroin - and may result in higher levels of abstinence than does the outpatient treatment that is currently the standard of care.
University of Rochester Medical Center researcher Robert Gramling, M.D., D.Sc., found that men who believed they were at lower-than-average risk for cardiovascular disease actually experienced a three times lower incidence of death from heart attacks and strokes.
› Verified 1 days ago