Nicole Francisca Roberts, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 312 Harrisburg St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-259-0222 Fax: 717-259-6348 |
Manotte Etienne, RN, MSN, FNP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 312 Harrisburg St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-259-0222 |
Maria E Renteria, Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 105 4th St, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-812-4900 Fax: 717-255-0951 |
Daniel W Zepp, Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 640 Fish And Game Rd, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-850-5674 |
Natalie Ann Miller, CRNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6108 Carlisle Pike, East Berlin, PA 17316 Phone: 717-424-3312 |
News Archive
A study published Wednesday in the Journal of the International AIDS Society assessed how the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria's "investments in HIV programs were targeted to key populations in relation to disease burden and national income," concluding, "There has been a sustained scale up of the Global Fund's support to HIV programs.
A new application note from Porvair Sciences details a protocol for its Chromatrap® ChIP assay kit that has been developed to enrich epigenetic marks from primary human tissue cells.
The Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday approved a $52.1 billion appropriations bill to fund U.S. state and foreign operations in FY 2013, Devex reports. "The committee voted 29-1 to send the ... bill to the full Senate floor for consideration," the news service writes, adding, "It is still unclear when the bill will be scheduled for a full Senate vote" (Mungcal, 5/25).
Bayer HealthCare today announced the company has started to enroll patients in an international Phase II/III trial to evaluate its investigational compound BAY94-9027 for the treatment of hemophilia A.
A new study-done on a scale an order of magnitude greater than anything previously attempted in the field of malaria-has uncovered an arsenal of proteins produced by the malaria parasite that allows it to hijack and remodel human red blood cells, leaving the oxygen-carrying cells stiff and sticky.
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