Dr. Shelly Rutledge, PHARM.D. Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 178 Highway 167 N, Bald Knob, AR 72010 Phone: 501-724-6207 Fax: 501-724-3305 |
Imi Mvere Pharmacist - Pharmacist Clinician (PhC)/ Clinical Pharmacy Specialist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 178 Highway 167 N, Bald Knob, AR 72010 Phone: 501-724-2391 |
Taylor Victoria Borne Pharmacist - Pharmacist Clinician (PhC)/ Clinical Pharmacy Specialist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 178 Highway 167 N, Bald Knob, AR 72010 Phone: 501-724-6207 Fax: 501-724-3305 |
News Archive
National Institutes of Health researchers have discovered a rare and sometimes lethal inflammatory disease - otulipenia - that primarily affects young children. They have also identified anti-inflammatory treatments that ease some of the patients' symptoms: fever, skin rashes, diarrhea, joint pain and overall failure to grow or thrive.
"Nothing could be more appropriate than the World Food Day focus on cooperatives this year," because "the collective power of cooperatives can enable better access to market, better returns, better access to inputs and services, and a better support network for smallholder farmers," leading to "higher returns" which allow farmers to "better provide for the nutrition, education and health of their families," Mark Bowman, managing director of SABMiller, writes in an AllAfrica.com opinion piece.
For premature infants who can't breastfeed on their own, "mother's own milk" (MOM) is by far the best nutrition. There's an urgent need for effective ways to increase the relatively low rates of MOM feeding for preterm infants born to Black and Hispanic mothers.
A drug used to treat high blood pressure may alleviate anxiety induced by long-term heavy alcohol use, and also halt the damage such drinking can cause to the brain's ability to grow new cells, research at the Queensland University of Technology shows.
A new study from Belgium indicates that the majority of community-dwelling elderly adults are taking prescription medications inappropriately. The study, which is published in the British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, also found a link between underuse-not taking essential medications-and an increased risk of dying or needing to be hospitalized.
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