Mrs. Tochi Eunice Ezenwugo, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 23370 Road 22, Central California Womens Facility, Chowchilla, CA 93610 Phone: 559-665-5531 |
Mrs. Naomi Nduta Mungai Loadholt, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 23370 Road 22, California State Prison, Chowchilla, Chowchilla, CA 93610 Phone: 559-665-5531 |
Skylar Mazzoni, NP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 401 Trinity Ave, Chowchilla, CA 93610 Phone: 559-664-4000 Fax: 559-675-5224 |
News Archive
A number of chronic diseases are in fact caused by one or more infectious agents. For example, stomach ulcers are caused by Helicobacter pylori, chronic lung disease in newborns and chronic asthma in adults are both caused by Mycoplasmas and Chlamydia pneumonia, while some other pathogens have been associated with atherosclerosis. The realization that pathogens can produce slowly progressive chronic diseases has opened new lines of research into Alzheimer's disease.
If one of your aging parents suddenly needs help with the tasks of daily living, who will provide it? You? "If that's your default plan," says Craig Smith, President of LTC Financial Partners LLC (LTCFP), "be prepared for sticker shock. Your services don't come free." LTCFP is one of the nation's largest and most experienced long-term care insurance agencies.
In his Foreign Policy column, "The Optimist," Charles Kenny, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development and a Schwartz fellow at the New America Foundation, responds to a speech to G20 leaders last week by Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, in which he "suggested that a financial transactions tax, alongside additional taxes on tobacco and carbon, could be used to help rich countries meet a global target of committing 0.7 percent of GDP to development aid."
A new report of research on 168 countries led by Jody Heymann, Associate Professor of Society, Health and Human Development at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), finds that working conditions in the United States that support working families, lag far behind scores of other countries.
Researchers at the Buck Institute have shown a new effect on aging via a small drug-like molecule that alters the perception of food in the nematode C. elegans. Publishing in Aging Cell, researchers "tricked" the worm's metabolism into a state of caloric restriction, extending the animal's lifespan by 50 percent.
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