Iris Kay Bessiouni, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-6024 Fax: 334-624-4453 |
Mrs. Dana Gentry Eicher, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 800 Hall St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-0871 Fax: 334-624-3312 |
Anna Hughey Compton, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-4442 Fax: 334-624-4453 |
Mr. Steven Galvez, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-3024 Fax: 334-624-4453 |
Megan Dillard, CRNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-3024 Fax: 334-624-4452 |
Julie Suzanne Aldridge, Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-4442 Fax: 334-624-1405 |
Jamie Lynn Haney, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-3024 Fax: 334-624-4453 |
Bobbie A Curtis, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Primary Care Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 508 Greene St, Greensboro, AL 36744 Phone: 334-624-4442 Fax: 334-624-1405 |
News Archive
The parents of Susanne Schroff, Gunther and Ingrid Schroff, created the Schroff Foundation out of their private fortune in 1984. Their declared aim was to exploit entrepreneurial success for socially important scientific causes and in the interests of society.
Results from a study published in the British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology may help explain why cannabidiol-a chemical component of marijuana with no psychoactive properties-reduces the frequency of seizures in patients with a severe form of epilepsy.
A currently-circulating strain of influenza has not been common in New Zealand since 1987 and means children and young people can be at particular risk of serious illness, the Ministry of Health says.
Working with human colorectal cancer cells, a University of Minnesota team, led by cancer biologists Zigang Dong and Ann Bode, has found the potential culprit among a network of enzymes that relay signals inside cells to regulate such functions as cell growth, cancer development and programmed cell death.
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