Dr. Nicole Brooke Demarco, OD Optometrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 123 Hospital Way, Brewster, WA 98812 Phone: 509-689-2342 Fax: 509-689-9207 |
B. Michael Southam, O.d., Pc/ Family Vision Care Of Central Washington Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 123 Hospital Way, Brewster, WA 98812 Phone: 509-689-2342 |
Gillespie Eye Care Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 123 Hospital Way, Brewster, WA 98812 Phone: 509-787-1581 |
Valley Vision Optometrist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 123 Hospital Way, Brewster, WA 98812 Phone: 509-689-2342 Fax: 509-689-9207 |
Dr Duane L Rana P S Optometrist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 123 Hospital Way, Brewster, WA 98812 Phone: 509-689-3220 Fax: 509-689-9207 |
Dr. Brandon Watson, O.D. Optometrist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 123 Hospital Way, Brewster, WA 98812 Phone: 509-689-2342 Fax: 509-689-9207 |
News Archive
Women can increase their chances for a healthy pregnancy by eating right, exercising, not smoking, and getting early medical care, says a podcast featuring a National Institutes of Health obstetrician who oversees research on pregnancy and birth.
Researchers from the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the Baltimore VA Medical Center have launched a study of exercise and computerized memory training to see if those activities may help people with Parkinson's disease prevent memory changes. The type of memory that will be examined is known as "executive function;" it allows people to take in information and use it in a new way.
A novel LED irradiation system developed by the Ferdinand-Braun-Institut aims to kill microorganisms with ultra-short wave UV light - without side effects. Prototype handed over to the Charité for initial testing.
Two patterns of antecedent or "prodromal" psychiatric symptoms may help to identify young persons at increased risk of developing bipolar disorder (BD), according to a new analysis in the Harvard Review of Psychiatry.
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Brady Urological Institute, Wake Forest University and the Karolinska Institute in Sweden have identified an array of gene markers for hereditary prostate cancer that, along with family history for the disease, appear to raise risk to more than nine times that of men without such markers.
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