Ann R Schaer, PA C Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 47 Main St, Sheepscot Valley Health Ctr, Coopers Mills, ME 04341 Phone: 207-549-7581 Fax: 207-549-3439 |
Brooke A. Perez, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 47 Main St, Coopers Mills, ME 04341 Phone: 207-549-7581 Fax: 207-549-3439 |
Rachel Kathleen Moore, PA Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 47 Main St, Coopers Mills, ME 04341 Phone: 207-549-7581 Fax: 207-549-3439 |
Shannon Lynn Hunt, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 47 Main St, Coopers Mills, ME 04341 Phone: 207-549-7581 Fax: 207-549-3439 |
Anna Simmler, Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 47 Main St, Coopers Mills, ME 04341 Phone: 207-549-7581 |
Zachary Wissman, PA Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 47 Main St, Coopers Mills, ME 04341 Phone: 207-549-7581 Fax: 207-549-3439 |
News Archive
Researchers use reference preparations from pooled swab samples to compare the analytical sensitivity of different SARS-CoV-2 assays
Like all organisms, bacteria must compete for resources to survive, even if it means a fight to the death. New research led by scientists from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine and the University of California, Santa Barbara, describes new complexities in the close chemical combat waged among bacteria.
New technologies have been likened, famously, to magic. At first, even the few who understand how they work have a tendency to sit back and marvel. Soon, flaws and limitations are detected and the invention process begins again, resulting, almost always, in improvements.
Thought leaders from the medical, scientific and patient advocacy communities gathered in New York and London for CSL Behring's Key Issues Dialogue–Immunoglobulin to examine challenges facing patients with primary immunodeficiencies.
A study in rats shows that exposure to a high-fat diet during pregnancy produces permanent changes in the offspring's brain that lead to overeating and obesity early in life, according to new research by Rockefeller University scientists.
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