Mrs. Patricia L. Sullivan, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 608 Willard St, Frontenac, KS 66763 Phone: 620-231-8849 Fax: 620-231-8847 |
Mrs. Carrie Lynn Farrington, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1011 N Highway 69, Frontenac, KS 66763 Phone: 620-235-1377 Fax: 620-235-1558 |
Mrs. Ashleigh Ann Heter, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1011 N. Hwy 69, Frontenac, KS 66763 Phone: 620-235-1377 |
Mrs. Pamela Sue Murphy, ARNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1011 N 69 Highway, Frontenac, KS 66763 Phone: 620-235-1377 |
Kimberly Obrien Wood, APRN-BC Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1011 N Highway 69, Frontenac, KS 66763 Phone: 620-235-1377 |
News Archive
Perhaps this headline isn't surprising, but now it has scientific backing: new research at the University of Haifa found that grandchildren who, during their childhood, were taken care of by their grandparents, expressed a greater desire to take care of their grandparents as they aged than did grandchildren who were not taken care of by their grandparents.
House Appropriations Chairman Rep. Hal Rogers released a 2012 budget plan on Wednesday that would cut federal spending levels by $30 billion compared with current levels, the Wall Street Journal reports.
New research from psychologists at the Universities of Exeter and Cardiff shows that people can train their brains to become less impulsive, resulting in less risk-taking during gambling. The research could pave the way for new treatments for people with addictions to gambling, drugs or alcohol as well as impulse-control disorders, such as ADHD.
Professor Matthias Tschöp, MD, has been appointed the new CEO of Helmholtz Zentrum München. He took over from Professor Günther Wess, who led the center for the past 13 years.
The uproar at this summer's raucous town hall meetings, Rep. Joe Wilson's outburst in Congress and the endless debate over whether some opposition to healthcare reform is racially-tinged are a major disservice to the millions of Americans who need healthcare reform. Rep. Wilson doesn't worry about costs if a member of his family falls ill; he is covered. The majority of the people screaming and waving signs at town hall meetings don't worry either. They are covered. Their family members walk into a doctor's office or hospital emergency room, flash insurance cards and receive the best treatment available.
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