Molly K Roose, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1683 Main St, Windsor, CO 80550 Phone: 970-400-7618 |
Elizabeth Arianne Coffman, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1683 Main St, Windsor, CO 80550 Phone: 970-686-0124 Fax: 970-686-0845 |
Duy Duy Thuc Tran, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1455 Main St Ste 150, Windsor, CO 80550 Phone: 970-686-0124 Fax: 970-686-0845 |
Kristina Sandstedt, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1455 Main St Ste 100, Windsor, CO 80550 Phone: 970-686-3950 Fax: 970-686-3960 |
Jackson Ferguson, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1455 Main St Ste 100, Windsor, CO 80550 Phone: 970-686-3950 Fax: 970-686-3960 |
Della Mcguire, PA Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4630 Royal Vista Cir, Ste 7, Windsor, CO 80528 Phone: 970-530-0575 Fax: 970-530-0581 |
News Archive
Astronauts, submariners, miners, and those suffering from lung ailments take note: Innovation is coming to the rescue. A group of scientists from Battelle has earned a patent for generating oxygen in a process that mimics photosynthesis.
A novel drug that mimics a naturally occurring molecule found in coffee and blueberries has been developed to treat radiation exposure. Charles R. Yates, Pharm.D., Ph.D., and colleagues Duane Miller, Ph.D., and Waleed Gaber, Ph.D., from the University of Tennessee Health Science Center and Baylor College of Medicine, show that application of this drug, starting 24 hours after radiation exposure, increases survival in animal models by three-fold compared to placebo.
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson has announced the three states where Medicare will conduct a demonstration project involving a new definition for homebound that would allow Medicare beneficiaries receiving home health benefits to leave their home more frequently and for longer periods without risking the loss of those benefits.
​Beyond plate size and calorie count, the war against obesity may have a new leader - the dinner table. Families that eat together without the television on and stay seated until everyone's finished have children with lower weights and body mass index (BMI), reports a Cornell behavioral economist in the October issue of Obesity.
More Americans of all ages are rolling out their yoga mats in an effort to improve their health. A large nationally representative survey shows that the number of Americans using mind and body approaches to improve health and well-being remains high. Of note is a significant increase in the use of yoga since 2002. In addition, almost as many Americans practice meditation or receive chiropractic or osteopathic manipulation.
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