Heather Marie Tremblay, MSN, APRN, PMHNP-BC Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 617 Liberty St, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-632-2144 |
Tricia Aubrey Cunningham, Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 617 Liberty St, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-632-2144 |
Angela Lanae Riesen, FNP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 617 Liberty St, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-632-2144 |
Mary Kay Cummins, ARNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 609 Liberty St, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-632-2181 Fax: 785-632-2309 |
Austin Keith Gydesen, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 609 Liberty St, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-632-2181 Fax: 785-632-2309 |
Audra Walter, ARNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 609 Liberty St, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-632-2181 Fax: 785-632-2309 |
Emily Elizabeth Ebert, FNP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 2204 10th Rd, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-447-0620 |
Kathryn Ann Heins-erickson, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Adult Health Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 409 Lincoln Ave, Erickson Medical Clinic Llc, Clay Center, KS 67432 Phone: 785-777-2622 Fax: 785-777-2623 |
News Archive
Clinical and basic science researchers from around the world will convene in Hong Kong from January 28 to 30 for the First International Congress on Abdominal Obesity: "Bridging the Gap between Cardiology and Diabetology."
Adding a spoonful of sugar to coffee makes it sweeter, but in plants, researchers have discovered, the addition of sugar molecules to particular proteins plays a surprising variety of roles in basic developmental processes.
A scientific team led by Cedars-Sinai has been awarded $12 million from the National Institutes of Health to investigate two deadly lung conditions: idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and chronic lung allograft dysfunction.
Our cells live ever on the verge of suicide, requiring the close attention of a team of molecules to prevent the cells from pulling the trigger. This self-destructive tendency can be a very good thing, as when dangerous precancerous cells are permitted to kill themselves, but it can also go horribly wrong, destroying brain cells that store memories, for instance. Rockefeller University scientists are parsing this perilous arrangement in ever finer detail in hopes that understanding the basic mechanisms of programmed cell death, or apoptosis, will enable them eventually to manipulate the process to kill the cells we want to kill and protect the ones we don't.
› Verified 2 days ago