Fred D Stoute, PHARMACIST Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 412 Olive St, Arnaudville, LA 70512 Phone: 337-754-7481 |
Larry Julien Guilbeau Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 123 Fuselier Rd, Arnaudville, LA 70512 Phone: 337-754-5231 Fax: 337-754-7976 |
Tiffany L Richard, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1210 Highway 31, Arnaudville, LA 70512 Phone: 337-288-7687 |
Dr. Courtney Dugas, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 412 Olive St, Arnaudville, LA 70512 Phone: 337-344-0414 |
Angela Daigle Pharmacist - Pharmacotherapy Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 335 High View Park Ln, Arnaudville, LA 70512 Phone: 337-662-3287 |
News Archive
A study conducted by the University at Albany, the National Institutes of Health and New York University Langone Medical Center uncovered several new findings about the amount of time children spend watching television or using a computer or mobile device.
A recent theoretical paper, currently available on the medRxiv preprint server, unveils a novel vaccination model that shows how a herd immunity threshold (HIT) value which considers heterogeneity is substantially lower in comparison with a HIT value of assuming a homogeneous population – with many implications for further vaccination planning.
In everyday life, attention and awareness appear tightly interwoven. Attending to the scissors on the rinumber of behavioural observations have recently led scientists to postulate that attention and awareness are fundamentally different processes and not necessarily connected.ght side of your desk, you become aware of their attributes, for example the red handles. Vice versa, the red handles could attract your attention to the scissors.
The spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has reached pandemic status, spanning 114 countries and territories, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared. The novel coronavirus that emerged three months ago has rapidly infected more than 126,000 people, taking the lives of more than 4,600.
"Antibiotic resistance has now become a costly and dangerous problem," The Economist writes in an article examining the factors that have contributed to the global rise of antibiotic resistant bacteria, ahead of next week's World Health Day dedicated to the issue.
› Verified 8 days ago