Sarah Lydia Scott, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 920 South Oak Street, Suite 1, Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Phone: 641-648-7100 Fax: 641-648-7095 |
Brian Vold, Nurse Practitioner - Psych/Mental Health Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 814 Railroad St, Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Phone: 641-494-5400 |
Michelle Kay Anderson, NP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 110 Rocksylvania Ave, Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Phone: 641-648-4631 |
Lindy Beth Ross, Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 505 Washington Ave, Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Phone: 641-316-1112 |
Mrs. Katie Lee Burroughs, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 920 S Oak St, Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Phone: 641-648-7000 |
Mr. Lee Carlson, ARNP-C Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 920 S Oak St Ste 1, Iowa Falls, IA 50126 Phone: 641-648-7000 |
News Archive
The search for new drugs to fight cancer remains at the top of the to do list for pharmaceutical researchers. A recent variation is polymer chemotherapy agents, drugs that have been attached to a "backbone" of long chain molecules.
Sanofi Pasteur, the vaccines division of Sanofi, presented Phase II (H-030-012) trial results for an investigational vaccine for the prevention of Clostridium difficile infection at the 114th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Despite the desperate need for new antibiotics to combat increasingly deadly resistant bacteria, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved only one new systemic antibiotic since the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) launched its 10 x '20 Initiative in 2010 - and that drug was approved two and a half years ago.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is no longer a fatal condition, thanks to newer medications inhibiting the retrovirus, but a puzzling phenomenon has surfaced among these patients — non-AIDS complications. Scientists at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine have resolved the mystery with their discovery of the leaky gut as the offender.
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