Anneli Kumpula, FNP, PMHNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 42815 N 14th St, New River, AZ 85087 Phone: 623-776-5366 Fax: 623-252-0575 |
Monique Leiler, FNP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2302 W Seminole Ct, New River, AZ 85087 Phone: 623-512-0544 |
Marla Elaine Sample-ormes, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2940 W Wander Rd, New River, AZ 85087 Phone: 623-221-4409 |
News Archive
The recent report by NHS Cancer Director Professor Mike Richards on the uptake in the NHS of new cancer drugs makes clear that many more people are getting access to effective cancer drugs evaluated by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence.
According to a new study by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, patients with Barrett's esophagus and early or pre-cancerous cells have been shown to significantly benefit from minimally invasive therapy delivered through an endoscope - a medical instrument used to look inside an organ or cavity in the body.
Humans have a "robust" capacity to learn and retain new information unconsciously, retaining so-called habit memory even when conscious or declarative learning is absent, memory experts at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and the San Diego Veterans Affairs Health System report in the July 28, 2005 issue of Nature.
Dr Andrew Johnson is speaking today (12 July) at the UK National Stem Cell Network annual conference. He and his team from the University of Nottingham have been using a Mexican aquatic salamander called an axolotl to study the evolution and genetics of stem cells - research that supports the development of regenerative medicine to treat the consequences of disease and injury using stem cell therapies. This team has found that there are extraordinary similarities in the development of axolotls and mammals that provide unique opportunities to study the properties of embryonic stem cells and germ cells.
A Johns Hopkins University mathematician and computer scientist joined an international team of neuroscientists to create a complete map of the learning and memory center of the fruit fly larva brain, an early step toward mapping how all animal brains work.
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