Cary Don Heard, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Brookshire's Pharmacy, 1105 West South Commerce St., Wills Point, TX 75169 Phone: 903-873-8237 |
Dr. Holly Renee Randolph, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 145 N 4th St, Wills Point, TX 75169 Phone: 903-873-2538 |
Dr. Leslie Tompkins, PHARMD, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 145 N 4th St, Wills Point, TX 75169 Phone: 903-873-2538 |
Tamera Armstrong, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1105 W South Commerce St, Wills Point, TX 75169 Phone: 903-873-8237 |
News Archive
Some individuals with epilepsy fail to respond to treatment with conventional drugs but benefit from consuming a ketogenic diet - a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet similar to the more commonly known Atkins diet.
The Associated Press/Washington Post: WellPoint, the parent company of Anthem Blue Cross "is blaming the Great Recession and rising medical costs for its planned 39 percent rate increase for some California customers of its Anthem Blue Cross plan. But Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius isn't buying the explanation proffered in a letter delivered to her" today.
If narrowed or blocked coronary vessels have to be widened or opened, a vascular support (stent) is usually inserted. Drug-coated stents are preferred for patients at high risk of renewed narrowing of vessels (restenosis). However, the use of antibody-coated stents has been increasing in recent years. Current studies provide indications that these new antibody-coated stents more frequently lead to myocardial infarction and make re-operation necessary.
How to meet new infection-control guidelines from the Joint Commission and the SHEA/IDSA Compendium will be the focus of a panel discussion at the upcoming annual meeting of the Association for Vascular Access (AVA).
In a new study published in Nature Genetics, Northwestern Medicine and Tel Aviv University scientists have found that a structural defect in skin cells can contribute to allergy development, including skin and food allergies, traditionally thought primarily to be a dysfunction of the immune system.
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