Mrs. Tashena Elizabeth Hill, PHARM D Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 West Gum St., Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-965-4101 Fax: 270-965-9957 |
Bradley A Boone, PHARM. D. Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 320 S Main St, Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-967-9007 Fax: 270-967-9008 |
David Michael Conyer, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 W Gum St, Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-965-4101 Fax: 270-965-9957 |
Dr. Ashley Dawn Brown, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9388 State Route 297, Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-519-7104 Fax: 270-988-4230 |
Mark S. Wurth, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 W Gum St, Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-965-4101 Fax: 270-965-9957 |
Marsha Lynn Huddleston, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 307 Sturgis Rd, Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-965-4114 Fax: 270-965-3764 |
Stuart Collins, R.PH. Pharmacist - Pharmacotherapy Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 W Gum St, Marion, KY 42064 Phone: 270-965-1054 |
News Archive
Assembly Bill 52 … would give the state the authority to approve, deny or modify excessive health insurance rate hikes - much as regulators do now with auto insurance. The bill is a lightning rod for many of the Capitol's most influential interest groups, pitting consumer, labor, small business and health care advocacy groups against the California Chamber of Commerce and hospital, physician and health insurance associations.
Alvotech, a powerful new player in the field of biopharmaceuticals, today announced plans to invest $250 million in the development and manufacturing of a portfolio of biosimilar monoclonal antibodies.
The fetal and infant mortality rate for women in Inuit-inhabited areas of Canada was 2.7 times higher than in the rest of Canada, and women had higher rates of preterm birth, found an article (pre-embargo link only) http://www.cmaj.ca/embargo/cmaj082042.pdf in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) www.cmaj.ca.
According to a new study, children who survive cancer are at a higher risk of cancer later in life or may die early of other cause. The study included almost 900 young cancer survivors treated at Sydney Children's Hospital, from 1972 to 1999, alongside new cancer cases and early deaths. The risk of cancer was five times higher in childhood cancer survivors, the results showed, compared with the overall NSW population, that these survivors were seven and a half times more likely to die early.
According to the new study, the presence of caspase-12, which appears to modulate inflammation and innate immunity in humans, increases the body's "vulnerability to bacterial infection and septic shock" while a deficiency confers strong resistance to sepsis. This new discovery suggests that caspase-12 antagonists could be a potentially useful in the treatment of sepsis and other inflammatory and immune disorders.
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