Jessica Leblanc, RNP Nurse Practitioner - Acute Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 400 Massasoit Ave, Suite 300, E Providence, RI 02914 Phone: 401-434-2704 |
Mr. Samuel David Kaufman, PMHNP-BC Nurse Practitioner - Psych/Mental Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 34 Rice Ave, E Providence, RI 02914 Phone: 617-799-5416 |
Mrs. Miranda Renee Wing, NP Nurse Practitioner - Acute Care Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1 Catamore Blvd, E Providence, RI 02914 Phone: 401-438-0008 Fax: 401-438-2272 |
Bethany A Erickson-caron, RNP Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 450 Veterans Memorial Pkwy Bldg 6, E Providence, RI 02914 Phone: 401-435-5533 Fax: 401-431-2555 |
News Archive
A trio of studies being published today in the journals Science and Cell describes advances toward the development of an HIV vaccine. The three study teams all demonstrated techniques for stimulating animal cells to produce antibodies that either could stop HIV from infecting human cells in the laboratory or had the potential to evolve into such antibodies.
Getting around without the need to concentrate on every step is something most of us can take for granted because our inner ears drive reflexes that make maintaining balance automatic.
Nurses and other hospital workers, especially those who work long hours or the night shift, often report trying to juggle the demands of the job and family obligations. A study out today by The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS) suggests that the higher the work-family conflict the greater the risk that health care workers will suffer from neck and other types of musculoskeletal pain.
Increased pain following surgery has long been linked to anxiety and "catastrophizing," an extreme response to stress. In a new study presented today at the 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), 97 patients - men and women - who were about to undergo minimally invasive total knee replacement (TKR) surgery, completed a brief survey to quantify their level of anxiety, as well as their typical level of anxiety and potential for catastrophizing. Pain data was then collected for seven days following surgery.
By employing optogenetics, a new field that uses genetically altered cells to respond to light, and a tandem unit cell (TCU) strategy, researchers at Stony Brook University have demonstrated a way to control cell excitation and contraction in cardiac muscle cells, the details of which are published in the early online edition of Circulation: Arrhythmia & Electrophysiology: "Stimulating Cardiac Muscle by Light: Cardiac Optogenetics by Cell Delivery."
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