Ms. Kimberly C Hill, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 132 State Highway 20 E, Freeport, FL 32439 Phone: 850-835-2028 Fax: 850-835-4923 |
Mr. Christopher Ray Weeks, R PH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 132 E Hwy 20, Freeport, FL 32439 Phone: 850-835-2028 Fax: 850-835-2028 |
Julia Schroeder Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 16400 Us Highway 331 S, Freeport, FL 32439 Phone: 850-835-2317 |
News Archive
QIAGEN, today announced both the launch of a new Influenza A/H1N1 test and several updates to its activities in providing solutions for the global surveillance of the swine flu pandemic. QIAGEN's new kit enables both the highly sensitive and specific detection of the novel Influenza A/H1N1, the virus that causes "swine flu", as well as of all other known Influenza A and B virus strains.
Melanoma is one of the less common types of skin cancer but it accounts for the majority of the skin cancer deaths (about 75 percent).The five-year survival rate for early stage melanoma is very high (98 percent), but the rate drops precipitously if the cancer is detected late or there is recurrence.So a great deal rides on the accuracy of the initial surgery, where the goal is to remove as little tissue as possible while obtaining "clean margins" all around the tumor.So far no imaging technique has been up to the task of defining the melanoma's boundaries accurately enough to guide surgery.Instead surgeons tend to cut well beyond the visible margins of the lesion in order to be certain they remove all the malignant tissue.Two scientists at Washington University in St. Louis have developed technologies that together promise to solve this difficult problem.
A preschool-based intervention program helped prevent early trends toward obesity and instilled healthy eating habits in multi-ethnic 2- to 5-year-olds, according to a report presented at the American Heart Association's Conference on Nutrition, Physical Activity and Metabolism.
The application of gentle cooling and warming currents inside the ear canal can provide relief for migraine sufferers, new research at the University of Kent has helped show.
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