Ms. Bonnie J Summers, NP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6000 Bond Ave, Centreville, IL 62207 Phone: 618-332-2740 Fax: 618-337-6039 |
Mr. Reginald Patrick Wince Sr., NP-C Nurse Practitioner - Adult Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 5900 Bond Ave, Centreville, IL 62207 Phone: 618-332-3060 Fax: 618-332-5297 |
Diana L Swanson, MSN, APRN, WHNP-BC Nurse Practitioner - Women's Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6000 Bond Ave, Centreville, IL 62207 Phone: 618-332-2740 Fax: 618-733-7654 |
Ms. Susan Thoma Rauckman, ANP-BC Nurse Practitioner - Adult Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6000 Bond Ave, Centreville, IL 62207 Phone: 618-332-2083 Fax: 618-337-6039 |
News Archive
Nearly 4 million people nationwide suffer from cardiac arrhythmias each year, according to the 2006 U.S. Cardiac Rhythm Management Market report by Frost and Sullivan. About 2.5 million of these cases cannot be treated or controlled through medication alone. Since pharmacological therapies have limited effectiveness, radiofrequency (RF) catheter ablation has emerged as the prominent approach for treating a broad range of arrhythmias.
"An estimated 17,000 children in the United States might have died unnecessarily over nearly two decades because they didn't have health insurance, according to a report from researchers at Johns Hopkins Children's Center in Baltimore," reports U.S. News and World Report.
There are several reasons for this. One is because analysis involving different kinds of blood cells may require you to be able to separate red blood cells from white blood cells, or plasma from whole blood etc.
In a letter to Mississippi State Representative Mark Formby this week, the Federal Trade Commission warns that a bill shifting regulatory authority over pharmacy benefit managers from the Mississippi Insurance Commissioner to the Board of Pharmacy "may increase pharmaceutical prices and reduce competition."
A new study published in The BMJ shows that people who had surgery to improve blood flow in their legs under spinal or epidural anesthesia were less likely to die than those who were given general anesthesia.
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