Mrs. Melody Sue Oeth, F.N.P. Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1900 W 4th St, Mount Vernon, IN 47620 Phone: 812-838-4891 Fax: 812-838-6595 |
Keely Nicole Brown, NP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 813 E 4th St Ste A, Mount Vernon, IN 47620 Phone: 812-450-1325 Fax: 812-838-9214 |
Leigh Ann Fromm, PMHNP, FNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 813 E 4th St Ste A, Mount Vernon, IN 47620 Phone: 812-450-1325 Fax: 812-838-9214 |
Joanna Osterman, Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 813 E 4th St, Mount Vernon, IN 47620 Phone: 812-450-1325 Fax: 812-838-9214 |
Kimberly Ann Jackson, N.P. Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 813 E 4th St, Ste A, Mount Vernon, IN 47620 Phone: 812-838-2139 Fax: 812-838-9214 |
News Archive
Gastric cancer, otherwise known as stomach cancer, does not respond well to existing treatments and it is currently the third leading cause of cancer death in the world (after lung and liver cancer). Researchers have discovered that certain drugs, currently used to treat breast, ovarian and pancreatic cancers, could also be used to treat certain gastric cancers with a particular pattern of mutations (genomic molecular fingerprint).
Medical students and residents should receive much more thorough and realistic instruction about the economic forces affecting health care and their own clinical decisions so that they can better serve patients' well-being and the nation's economic welfare, says a commentary published today in a theme issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, which focuses on improving medical education.
They say time heals all wounds, and new research from the University of California, Berkeley, indicates that time spent in dream sleep can help. UC Berkeley researchers have found that during the dream phase of sleep, also known as REM sleep, our stress chemistry shuts down and the brain processes emotional experiences and takes the painful edge off difficult memories.
MRI's give us a picture of our body's insides—organs, bones, nerves and soft tissue. But what if MRI's could show us the molecular makeup of our body parts, and help doctors more quickly determine the onset of disease and begin treatment?
Researchers from Bangalore, India, have found that 68 percent of pre-symptomatic patients with COVID-19 may be shedding the virus and potentially infecting others. Their study titled, "Quantitative COVID-19 infectiousness estimate correlating with viral shedding and culturability suggests 68% pre-symptomatic transmissions," was published on the open-access preprint server Medrxiv.
› Verified 7 days ago