Carriage Square Living & Rehab Center Medicare and Medicaid Location: 4009 Gene Field Road, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64506 Ratings: Phone: (816) 364-1526 |
Abbey Woods Center For Rehabilitation And Healing Medicare and Medicaid Location: 5026 Faraon St, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64506 Ratings: Phone: (816) 279-1591 |
Diversicare Of St Joseph Medicare and Medicaid Location: 3002 North 18th St, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64505 Ratings: Phone: (816) 364-4200 |
St Joseph Senior Living Medicare and Medicaid Location: 1317 North 36th Street, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64506 Ratings: Phone: (816) 676-1630 |
Living Community Of St Joseph Medicare and Medicaid Location: 1202 Heartland Road, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64506 Ratings: Phone: (816) 671-8500 |
Riverside Place Medicare and Medicaid Location: 1616 Weisenborn Road, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64507 Ratings: Phone: (816) 232-9874 |
St Joseph Chateau Medicare and Medicaid Location: 811 North 9th Street, Saint Joseph, Missouri 64501 Ratings: Phone: (816) 233-5164 |
News Archive
Infants born with complex congenital heart disease are not only at risk for serious heart-related complications, but also for developing a deadly bowel disease, regardless of the type of surgical intervention they receive for their heart. These are the findings from a study by Nationwide Children's Hospital, and appearing in Pediatric Critical Care Medicine published online May 6 ahead of print.
An international team of scientists from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore), Brown University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) platform that could one day be used in a system to assess vascular diseases, which are characterised by the abnormal condition of blood vessels.
Surgery is required when cancer of the kidney causes a Level III thrombus, or clot, to develop in the major vein leading back to the heart. Traditionally this complicated procedure, inferior vena cava (IVC) thrombectomy, is performed using a large open incision, primarily because the vein is often difficult to reach.
Countries recovering from war are at risk of being left to their own devices in tackling non communicable diseases, leaving an "open door" for exploitation by alcohol, tobacco and food companies, health experts warn.
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