Randy A Ryder Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 19205 Highway 12, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-938-0282 Fax: 707-938-2649 |
Tenzin Yangchen, PHARM D Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 477 W Napa St, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-996-0633 |
Tiffany Lam, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 19205 Sonoma Highway, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-938-0281 |
Tenzin Chokey Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 W Napa St Ste 35, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-938-4734 |
Kristina Savath Kim, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 W Napa St # 35, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-938-4734 |
Kuan Hsuan Wu Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 W Napa St # 35, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-938-4734 |
Lauren Kim Thi Nguyen Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 19205 Sonoma Hwy, Sonoma, CA 95476 Phone: 707-938-0281 |
News Archive
International drug makers are expected to produce three billion doses of the H1N1 (swine flu) vaccine, "enough for just under half the world's population," a WHO official said Thursday, Canwest News Service/Ottawa Citizen reports. "The agency was hoping pharmaceutical companies would be able to make about five billion doses a year, but data collected over the summer led to the revised estimate," the news service writes (Fitzpatrick, 9/24).
On Sept. 24, 2014 Heart Hospital of Austin became the first facility in Texas to implant a new miniaturized, wireless monitoring sensor to manage heart failure (HF). The CardioMEMS HF System is the first and only FDA-approved heart failure monitoring device that has been proven to significantly reduce hospital admissions when used by physicians to manage heart failure.
Pathogens make themselves feel at home in the human body, invading cells and living off the plentiful amenities on offer. However, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin, together with colleagues at Harvard University, reveal an opposite strategy used to ensure infection success. Pathogens can actually delay their entry into cells to ensure their survival.
After spending much of the past year tending to elderly patients, doctors are seeing a clear demographic shift: young and middle-aged adults make up a growing share of the patients in covid-19 hospital wards.
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