Cristina Newsom, PMHNP-BC Nurse Practitioner - Psych/Mental Health Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 672 Wilton Rd, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-778-9531 Fax: 866-644-5928 |
Ms. Susan N Tinguely, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 181 Franklin Health Commons, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-778-6394 Fax: 207-778-2886 |
Rebecca Bolduc, FNP-C Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 111 Franklin Health Cmns, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-778-4922 |
Janine White, CNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 111 Franklin Health Cmns, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-779-6031 |
Amelia Hutchinson, CNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 145 Main St Ste 1, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-779-6553 Fax: 207-578-7343 |
News Archive
Treatment with sertraline may provide nominal but important improvements in cognition and social participation in very young children with fragile X syndrome, the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability and the leading single-gene cause of autism, a study by researchers with the UC Davis MIND Institute has found.
Prof. Dr. Dr. Klaus Aktories and Dr. Panagiotis Papatheodorou from the Institute of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology of the University of Freiburg have discovered the receptor responsible for smuggling the toxin of the bacterium Clostridium perfringens into the cell.
Using data from a large American epidemiological mental health survey, based on a nationally representative sample of over 5000 people, Dr Mark Shevlin and Dr Gary Adamson found that social and environmental factors, such as childhood abuse, could significantly increase the risk of psychosis in later life.
Australian females will be one jump ahead of some of their counterparts elsewhere in the world with the first vaccinations against cervical cancer taking place in Brisbane today.
Some human embryonic stem cell researchers recently have questioned whether methods used in a study published in the Aug. 24 edition of the journal Nature were sufficient to conclude that human embryonic stem cells could be created without destroying the embryo, the Wall Street Journal reports (Hamilton/Regalado, Wall Street Journal, 9/5).
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