Ms. Angela Christine Yates-griffin, APRN, CNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 121 N Mekusukey Ave, Wewoka, OK 74884 Phone: 405-257-5422 Fax: 405-257-5463 |
Korey Danielle Taylor, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 207 W 1st Street, Wewoka, OK 74884 Phone: 405-257-5422 Fax: 405-257-5463 |
Amy Marie Ashley, APRN-CNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1401 W 1st St, Wewoka, OK 74884 Phone: 405-257-3396 Fax: 405-257-6908 |
Mrs. Tracy S Williams, APN Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Junction Of Hwy 270 And 56, Wewoka, OK 74884 Phone: 405-257-6282 Fax: 405-257-2051 |
Wendy Jean Pingleton, APRN Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1401 W 1st St, Wewoka, OK 74884 Phone: 405-257-3396 Fax: 405-257-6908 |
News Archive
Researchers report that diffusion tensor imaging can identify structural changes in the white matter of the brain that correlates to cognitive deficits even in patients with mild traumatic brain injury.
Leidos, a national security, health and engineering solutions company, is a Platinum Sponsor of the 34th National Veterans Wheelchair Games scheduled for Aug. 12-17 in Philadelphia, Pa.
One out of every two women of reproductive age is overweight or obese. Researchers from the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Research Institute, from the University of Ottawa (faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences) and from the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute set out to discover if overweight or obese women are in fact more likely to give birth to above average weight babies, as reported in the Journal of Maternal Fetal and Neonatal Medicine.
A dietary supplement derived from glucose increases muscle-force production in the Duchenne muscular dystrophy mouse model by 50% in ten days, according to a study conducted by researchers from Université Laval's Faculty of Medicine and Centre hospitalier universitaire de Québec Research Centre-Université Laval.
Researchers led by Columbia University Medical Center have discovered that the skeleton plays an important role in regulating blood sugar and have further illuminated how bone controls this process. The finding, published in Cell, is important because it may lead to more targeted drugs for type 2 diabetes.
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