Kurt Freischlag, OT Occupational Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 625 E Broadway Ave, Jackson, WY 83001 Phone: 307-733-3636 |
Krysten Gayle Williams, OTR Occupational Therapist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 120 W Pearl Ave, Jackson, WY 83001 Phone: 307-734-9129 |
Melanie R Canna, OTR/L Occupational Therapist - Neurorehabilitation Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 625 E Broadway Ave, Jackson, WY 83001 Phone: 307-733-3636 |
News Archive
The current health care debate in the United States is complicated. Trade-offs between heath care expenditures, lifestyle choices and life expectancy have been suggested but seldom clearly demonstrated.
Men with high levels of a Adiponectin hormone secreted by fat cells have a lesser chance of heart attacks, according to a new study that could lead to new ways to prevent and treat heart disease.
Could number two be number one when it comes to combating recurrent Clostridium difficile (CDI) infections?Using genetic material analysis and machine learning, UBC researchers have pinpointed several key factors to ensure successful fecal microbiota transplants (FMT), which have proven successful in treating bacterial infections in the gut including illnesses like C. difficile, Crohn's Disease, Colitis and even obesity, explains lead author Negin Kazemian.
In his latest Kaiser Health News column, done in collaboration with The New Republic, Jonathan Cohn writes: "Will health care reform reduce spending on health care too little? Or too much? Over the last several days, one respected authority made a version of the former argument while another made a version of the latter-offering a reminder of why reform is so complicated and why the new law, for all its imperfections, is still an important step forward" (Kaiser Health News).
The world needs new antibiotics to overcome the ever increasing resistance of disease-causing bacteria - but it doesn't need the side effect that comes with some of the most powerful ones now available: hearing loss. Today, researchers report they have developed a new approach to designing antibiotics that kill even "superbugs" but spare the delicate sensory cells of the inner ear.
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