Caitlin Nicole Armstrong, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 433 W High St, Bryan, OH 43506 Phone: 419-636-1131 |
Mr. Larry Michael Pickett, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 433 W High St, Bryan, OH 43506 Phone: 419-636-1131 Fax: 419-636-3100 |
Steve Schultz, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 433 W High St, Bryan, OH 43506 Phone: 419-636-1131 Fax: 419-636-3100 |
Brock Minor, Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 433 W High St, Bryan, OH 43506 Phone: 419-636-1131 Fax: 419-636-3100 |
Amelia Julio, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 433 W High St, Bryan, OH 43506 Phone: 419-636-1131 |
Megan P Fillman, CRNA Nurse Anesthetist, Certified Registered Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 433 W High St, Bryan, OH 43506 Phone: 419-636-1131 Fax: 419-636-3100 |
News Archive
About 66 percent of the nearly 20 million state and local government employees were enrolled in employer-sponsored health plans in 2008, compared with 54 percent of private-sector workers, according to the latest News and Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Prop. 46 would make it mandatory for doctors to consult the database. California would become one of nine states requiring doctors to check before prescribing painkillers to first-time patients. After passing similar laws, Tennessee and New York saw a significant reduction in the number of narcotics prescriptions written. Studies have verified the correlation, but acknowledge that drug abusers may be turning to street drugs, like heroin. Many doctors in California like the database. Some have called it 'indispensable.' But they don't like being told how to practice medicine (Dembosky, 10/14).
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and the University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute have formed a collaboration to provide proton therapy for St. Jude patients. The announcement follows the approval of the first clinical study to evaluate the use of proton therapy for rare brain cancers in children younger than 3 years old.
A research consortium made up of the Virgen del Rocio hospital in Seville, Sant Joan de Deu and the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute in Barcelona, has found a new therapeutic alternative for children who suffer from a malignant pediatric tumor bone and soft tissue called Ewing's sarcoma.
Scientists at The University of Nottingham have found that a genetic rogue element produced by sequences until recently considered 'junk DNA' could promote cancer progression.
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