Cody Lee Hattenberger, PHARM.D Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57950 Leavenworth St, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 163-759-5277 |
Hilary Gremminger Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57950 Leavenworth St, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 316-759-5277 |
Dr. Melissa K Servis, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57950 Leavenworth St Bldg 250, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 316-759-5277 |
Dr. Cari Ann Dimercurio, PHARM D Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 22d Medical Group, 57950 Leavenworth St, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 316-759-5277 |
Chang Inn Kim, PHARMD Pharmacist - Pharmacist Clinician (PhC)/ Clinical Pharmacy Specialist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57950 Leavenworth St Ste 4e1, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 316-759-5277 Fax: 316-759-6776 |
Melissa Jo Pammer, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57950 Leavenworth St, 22 Mdss/sgsap, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 316-759-5509 Fax: 316-759-5038 |
Dr. Jack William Drakeford, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57950 Leavenworth St, Suite 5d4, Mcconnell Afb, KS 67221 Phone: 316-759-5066 |
News Archive
Patricia Powers went a few years without health insurance and couldn't afford regular doctor visits. So she had no idea cancerous tumors were silently growing in both of her breasts.
Harvard Medical School researchers have successfully synthesized a DNA-based memory loop in yeast cells, findings that mark a significant step forward in the emerging field of synthetic biology.
Nearly a quarter century ago, a genetic variant known as ApoE4 was identified as a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease- one that increases a person's chances of developing the neurodegenerative disease by up to 12 times.
Colorado's legislature is taking up a bill Thursday that would limit how much hospitals can charge people without insurance. ... The lawmaker who wrote it is trying to reduce the number of Coloradans bankrupted by medical bills.
Japanese researchers have successfully reversed a woman's diabetes by transplanting insulinmaking cells (islets) from a living donor's pancreas into her, reporting their results in a research letter published online today by The Lancet. This is the first successful operation of its kind using the islets from a living donor.
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