Alicia Ray, PT Physical Therapist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 622 Aberdeen Ave, Jordan, MN 55352 Phone: 952-492-2220 Fax: 952-492-2073 |
Mrs. Michelle Linae Jung, MPT Physical Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 622 Aberdeen Ave, Jordan, MN 55352 Phone: 952-492-5559 |
Kiirsten Rakers, BS Physical Therapist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 100 Hope Ave, Jordan, MN 55352 Phone: 952-492-8470 Fax: 952-492-3880 |
Krista Lee Fromm, PT Physical Therapist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 622 Aberdeen Ave, Jordan, MN 55352 Phone: 952-492-2220 |
News Archive
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today expanded the approval of a heart valve to include a size small enough to be used in newborn pediatric patients to treat heart defects. Specifically, the agency approved the Masters Series Mechanical Heart Valve with Hemodynamic Plus Sewing Cuff to include the 15-mm valve size, making it the smallest mechanical heart valve approved in the world.
LigoCyte Pharmaceuticals, Inc. announced today that it has initiated its third human clinical trial of its norovirus vaccine. The Phase I/II study will assess safety and immunogenicity associated with LigoCyte's investigational, nasally-delivered, dry powder vaccine in healthy adults. The study will also assess potential protection against clinical symptoms of norovirus infection by including a live virus challenge of subjects that have received either the vaccine or placebo.
Family members or friends caring for aging or disabled individuals in California are under both financial and emotional strain and are likely to face even greater burdens, given recent cuts in state support for programs and services that support in-home care, write the authors of a new policy brief by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.
Opioid therapy is complex. In recent years, a rise in opioid-related deaths and changing prescribing guidelines and regulatory policies have led many physicians to reduce daily doses for patients prescribed stable opioid therapy for chronic pain.
Women with cystic fibrosis can have fertility treatment to help them have babies without any long-term adverse effects on either themselves or their children, according to new research presented at the 25th annual meeting of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology in Amsterdam today (Tuesday).
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