Mr Shawn Edward Strickland, PA- C | |
101 Florence Street, Ansted, WV 25812 | |
(304) 658-5100 | |
(304) 658-3375 |
Full Name | Mr Shawn Edward Strickland |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Speciality | Physician Assistant - Medical |
Location | 101 Florence Street, Ansted, West Virginia |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Medicare enrolled and may accept medicare through third-party reassignment. May prescribe medicare part D drugs. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1134259278 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Taxonomy | Type | License (State) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
363AM0700X | Physician Assistant - Medical | 1072896 (West Virginia) | Primary |
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Mr Shawn Edward Strickland, PA- C 101 Florence St, Ansted, WV 25812 Ph: (304) 658-5100 | Mr Shawn Edward Strickland, PA- C 101 Florence Street, Ansted, WV 25812 Ph: (304) 658-5100 |
News Archive
Severe bacterial infections are a leading cause of death globally. Delays in effective treatment can increase the chance that a patient dies but treating a patient before blood cultures are drawn may make it impossible to identify the bacteria causing the infection and make it challenging to identify the best choice of treatment.
Lobbyists for generic biologic drugmakers are fighting to undercut a provision in the proposed health overhaul that would protect brand-name pharmaceutical companies from lower-cost, generic competition over new products for 12 years, the Associated Press reports. The generic companies have friends in high places: "White House officials and Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, are trying to reduce the curbs against competition to 10 years or less" (Fram, 1/14).
In an elaborate study, biologists of the University of Luxembourg have found out that small molecules named microRNAs are, against many hopes, not yet suitable for early diagnosis of skin cancer, as well as supposedly for other types of cancer, in blood samples. For the first time they analysed all microRNAs in the serum of healthy people and thus provided a first complete image of the human "miRNome" in blood samples, in reference to the better-known "genome".
UCLA researchers have found that a state-of-the-art molecular genetic test greatly improves the speed and accuracy with which they can diagnose neurogenetic disorders in children and adults. The discovery could lead directly to better care for people with rare diseases like spinocerebellar ataxia, leukodsystrophy, spastic paraplegia and many other conditions.
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