Miss Kelley Fitzpatrick, M.D. Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 26 Six Pine Ranch Rd, Batesville, IN 47006 Phone: 812-933-5544 |
Thomas M Brown, M.D. Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 26 Six Pine Ranch Rd, Batesville, IN 47006 Phone: 812-933-5544 Fax: 812-932-1014 |
Emily Anne Housley, M.D. Obstetrics & Gynecology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 26 Six Pine Ranch Rd, Batesville, IN 47006 Phone: 812-933-5544 Fax: 812-932-1014 |
News Archive
A judge issued a temporary restraining order Tuesday against Missouri's secretary of state, Robin Carnahan, to prevent her from finalizing the language of a ballot question on health insurance exchanges. Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder, a Republican, sought the restraining order while a state court considers whether the language of the ballot question is biased, a claim leveled by Kinder and the state's top Republicans.
USA Today reports on how, in states that opted not to pursue the health law's Medicaid expansion, many of the poorest residents may fall through the cracks. Meanwhile, the San Jose Mercury News looks at some of the states that have been the most resistant to implementing the health law.
A study from USC researchers provides new understanding of the relationship between "sexting" and sexual behavior in early adolescence, contributing to an ongoing national conversation about whether sexually explicit text messaging is a risk behavior or just a technologically-enabled extension of normal teenage flirtation. The latest research, published in the July 2014 issue of the journal Pediatrics, found that among middle school students, those who reported receiving a sext were 6 times more likely to also report being sexually active.
At the premier European forum on rheumatologic disorders, ImmunArray, maker of a breakthrough technology that provides unprecedented levels of accuracy in ruling out the presence of lupus through a simple blood test, announced today that it is launching its new SLE-key™ Rule Out test in selected U.S. markets on July 1, 2015.
By painstakingly silencing genes one at a time, scientists at Duke University Medical Center have identified dozens of proteins the dengue fever virus depends upon to grow and spread among mosquitoes and humans.
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