Angela Allen Morris, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 500 Thurgood Marshall Hwy, Suite F, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 843-355-1774 Fax: 843-355-1775 |
Paul Andrew Gulledge, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 512 Nelson Blvd Ste 200, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 843-355-5459 Fax: 843-355-9704 |
Doris Owusu Amoah, DNP, FNP-BC Nurse Practitioner - Women's Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 500 Thurgood Marshall Hwy, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 843-355-1772 |
Destiny Murph, Nurse Practitioner - Primary Care Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 500 Thurgood Marshall Hwy, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 843-355-1772 |
Mrs. Nancy Carrol Smith, APRN Nurse Practitioner Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 520 Thurgood Marshall Hwy, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 843-355-6012 Fax: 843-355-9590 |
Matthew Amos Wise, NP-C Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 520 Thurgood Marshall Hwy Ste B, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 846-355-5628 Fax: 843-355-5616 |
Mr. James Alton Elvis Iii, FNP Nurse Practitioner - Family Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 520 Thurgood Marshall Hwy, Suite B, Kingstree, SC 29556 Phone: 843-355-5628 Fax: 843-355-5616 |
News Archive
The best place to enjoy a breath of fresh air may be a city bus, if Rice University students have their way. A team of graduating seniors has created a system for public transit that would continually clear the air of pathogens that can lead to tuberculosis (TB), flu and pneumonia.
The American Thyroid Association (ATA) today announced that new clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of hypothyroidism are published in the current issue of Thyroid.
The largest meta-analysis so far of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) for recurrent depression has found that MBCT is an effective treatment option that can help prevent the recurrence of major depression. The study used anonymised individual patient data from nine randomized trials of MBCT. It suggests that for the millions of people who suffer recurrent depression it provides a treatment choice and an alternative or addition to other approaches such as maintenance anti-depressants.
According to Dr. Ila R. Singh, an associate professor of pathology at the University of Utah, "for the first time we have analyzed prostate cancer and normal prostate tissue and found cancers are much more likely to have [the XMRV virus] ... It was also more likely to be present in more aggressive tumors," Singh said. "We found it in 20 percent of the least aggressive tumors and over 45 percent of the most aggressive tumors."
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