Jason B Roylance, PHARM D Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 850 S Main St, Smithfield, UT 84335 Phone: 435-563-6201 |
Kacie Woodward, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 850 S Main St, Smithfield, UT 84335 Phone: 435-563-6201 Fax: 435-563-4034 |
Wyatt Lynn Christensen, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 850 S Main St, Smithfield, UT 84335 Phone: 435-563-6201 Fax: 435-563-4034 |
Ryan Alsop, PHARMD, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 850 S Main St, Smithfield, UT 84335 Phone: 435-563-6201 Fax: 435-563-4034 |
News Archive
GSK Consumer Healthcare today announced it will update the alli product label to alert consumers to certain symptoms that have been associated with rare instances of severe liver injury reported in people taking orlistat, the active ingredient in alli. This update follows FDA's completion of its safety review of orlistat and is being implemented in conjunction with Roche, the manufacturer of the prescription dose of orlistat (Xenical). The agency stated that a cause and effect relationship has not been established.
The new journal Cardiovascular Innovations and Applications has just published the first issue of Volume 3. This is a Special Issue on Adult Congenital Heart Disease with Guest Editor Diego Moguillansky of the University of Florida Medical School.
We know that babies and young children often put non-food items in their mouths, a behaviour that occasionally leads to swallowing of foreign objects. Metallic toys and low-cost jewelry often contain toxic substances such as lead and cadmium.
Some of the important reasons underlying the current food crisis in Guatemala - where more than 50,000 families don't have enough to eat and women and children in particular are today struggling to survive - are at the top of the agenda of McGill University's second annual Global Food Security Conference, Oct. 5-7, in Montreal.
Women with bulimia nervosa appear to respond more impulsively during psychological testing than those without eating disorders, and brain scans show differences in areas responsible for regulating behavior, according to a report in the January issue of Archives of General Psychiatry , one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
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