Margaret Munro, OTR/L Occupational Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 14058 Bee Cave Pkwy Bldg A, Bee Cave, TX 78738 Phone: 512-263-2544 |
Erin Scully Yates, OT Occupational Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 14058 Bee Cave Pkwy, Bee Cave, TX 78738 Phone: 512-263-2544 |
Jill Knuth Occupational Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 14058 Bee Cave Pkwy, Bee Cave, TX 78738 Phone: 512-872-8170 |
Marissa Schatz, OTR/L Occupational Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 14058 Bee Cave Pkwy, Bee Cave, TX 78738 Phone: 512-872-8170 |
Tamara Dawn Carpenter, MOT Occupational Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 14058 A. Bee Cave Pkwy, Bee Cave, TX 78738 Phone: 512-263-2544 |
News Archive
Kaiser Health News' Maggie Mertens writes: "When Kelly Arellanes fell off a horse and suffered a severe head injury in rural Arkansas, medics said she would need to be airlifted immediately to the nearest hospital—50 miles away in Fort Smith.
Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle consider legislation that would allow people to keep the health insurance coverage they had that was canceled as a result of the health law. Elsewhere, Virginia's governor race continues to hinge on the candidates' stances on the law and Senate Democrats may allow a vote on legislation that would end health law subsidies for lawmakers and their aides.
Developing resistance to chemotherapy is a nearly universal, ultimately lethal consequence for cancer patients with solid tumors - such as those of the breast, prostate, lung and colon - that have metastasized, or spread, throughout the body. A team of scientists led by Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has discovered a key factor that drives this drug resistance - information that ultimately may be used to improve the effectiveness of therapy and buy precious time for patients with advanced cancer.
A report released on Sunday by a task force of the Association of American Medical Colleges that recommends new restrictions on what physicians, staff members and students at U.S. medical schools can accept from drug companies and medical device makers is "encouraging," but it "flinched" on some important issues, a New York Times editorial states (New York Times, 4/29).
A University of Maryland-led research team is working to help diplomats, military personnel, global managers and others who operate abroad to peer inside the minds of people from very different cultures.
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