Mrs. Megan Michelle Hardy, NP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1262 W Amity St, Louisburg, KS 66053 Phone: 913-967-9637 |
Kelli Elizabeth Docman, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1262 W Amity St, Louisburg, KS 66053 Phone: 913-747-5374 |
Crystal Raye Renaud, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 120 S Broadway St Ste 8, Louisburg, KS 66053 Phone: 913-423-9196 |
Mrs. Ashley Lauryn Kush, APRN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1210 N 2nd St E, Louisburg, KS 66053 Phone: 913-709-3354 |
Mr. Andrew Lee Hendrix, FNP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1307 N 2nd St E, Louisburg, KS 66053 Phone: 913-212-8233 |
News Archive
The United States spends significantly more money on the delivery of health care yet experiences inferior results. Maternal and infant mortality rates are elevated in the United States as compared to other high-income nations.
Researchers from Queensland University of Technology and Oxford University are working in collaboration to begin human clinical trials of inhaled corticosteroids, commonly used for asthma patients, on patients with COVID-19. The researchers believe that this could be useful for patients with the novel coronavirus infection.
Dr. Christine K. Cassel, president and CEO of the ABIM claims to be looking at the big picture. "The campaign is not about rationing or withholding proper care. On the contrary; if waste is not reduced, there will be less money for the care that is necessary," she said. "If we don't as a community collectively address this cost issue, then there's a whole lot of people that aren't going to get the care that they need."
The American Cancer Society, the largest non-government, not-for-profit funding source of cancer research in the United States, has awarded 152 new national research and training grants totaling $50,717,000 in the first of two grants cycles for 2010. The grants, primarily to early career researchers, cover a broad range of investigator-initiated ideas at 93 institutions nationwide, from whether cadmium exposure increases the risk of endometrial cancer, to studies of plant and bacterial-bourne compounds, to a study on a protein called survivin that could lead to novel drugs targeting prostate cancer.
Scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine, experimenting with a small number of human cell samples, report that the "hook" of cells used by SARS-CoV-2 to latch onto and infect cells is up to 700 times more prevalent in the olfactory supporting cells lining the inside of the upper part of the nose than in the lining cells of the rest of the nose and windpipe that leads to the lungs.
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