Jeffrey Wayne Cambridge, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1152 Emory Ln, Nashville, IN 47448 Phone: 317-989-9832 |
Dr. Rachael House, PHARMD Pharmacist - Pharmacist Clinician (PhC)/ Clinical Pharmacy Specialist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 103 Willow St, Nashville, IN 47448 Phone: 812-988-2231 |
Dustin Lee Brown, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 292 S Van Buren St, Nashville, IN 47448 Phone: 812-988-7463 |
Rhea Ellen Boley, PHARMACIST Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 292 S Van Buren St, Nashville, IN 47448 Phone: 812-988-7463 |
James Lloyd Zimmerly, RPH Pharmacist - Ambulatory Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 292 S Van Buren St, Nashville, IN 47448 Phone: 812-988-7463 |
News Archive
Even after leaving a violent or controlling relationship, the mental health of mothers may actually get worse before it gets better, a new study suggests. Researchers found that in the two years after the end of an abusive relationship, mothers showed poorer mental health, became more depressed and maintained high levels of anxiety. In those areas, they were no better off than women who stayed in abusive relationships.
Vermillion, Inc. today announced that Medicare will cover OVA1™, a test to help assess the likelihood that an ovarian mass is benign or malignant. Highmark Medicare Services is the CMS contractor that will process Medicare claims for OVA1. Yesterday Highmark announced its decision to cover this new service.
Kaiser Health News staff writer Jenny Gold writes about the confusion currently surrounding consumers. "Every day, dozens of confused, laid-off workers call the COBRA Help Center in Long Island, N.Y., a small private company which administers COBRA group health insurance plans.
Four out of ten children and adolescents who were admitted with new-onset type 1 diabetes and diabetic ketoacidosis did not receive hospital treatment the same day as contacts were taken with primary care. This is shown in a study from the University of Gothenburg.
A new Brown University study projects that increasing the number of Rhode Islanders treated every year for hepatitis C virus infection (HCV) to about 2,000 by 2020 would reduce cases by 90 percent and prevent more than 70 percent of expected liver-related deaths in the state by 2030.
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