Paige Fuller Luck, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1260 N Arendell Ave, Zebulon, NC 27597 Phone: 919-235-1965 Fax: 919-235-1326 |
Cassidy H Prentice, PAC Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 903 N Arendell Ave, Zebulon, NC 27597 Phone: 919-404-0445 Fax: 919-404-1642 |
Ms. Zandi Kafue Fennell, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1002 Dogwood Dr, Zebulon, NC 27597 Phone: 919-404-3621 Fax: 919-404-3938 |
Anais Olivero, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 817 E Gannon Ave, Zebulon, NC 27597 Phone: 919-375-1975 |
Mrs. Leana Lefrapper Higgins, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1260 N Arendell Ave, Zebulon, NC 27597 Phone: 919-235-1965 |
David Zuckerman, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1260 N Arendell Ave, Zebulon, NC 27597 Phone: 919-235-1965 |
News Archive
Texas schoolchildren must be current on their immunizations before going back to class this fall, but it may have been decades since some of their parents have had a vaccination. August is National Immunization Awareness Month, and UnitedHealthcare wants to remind adults that immunizations are not just for children.
Elsevier, the leading publisher of scientific, technical and medical information products and services, today announced the availability of Case Reviews Online, an online edition of Case Reviews print series offering radiology professionals self-assessment preparation for board review.
Medicare enrollees, who have watched their out-of-pocket spending on prescription drugs climb in recent years, might be in for a break.
Treatment with a telaprevir-based combination regimen for hepatitis C - heretofore a chronic, destructive and difficult to manage disease - effectively can be shortened to six months in about two-thirds of patients, finds a new study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
A newly available DNA-based prenatal blood test that can identify a pregnancy with Down syndrome can also identify two additional chromosome abnormalities: trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome) and trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome). The test for all three defects can be offered as early as 10 weeks of pregnancy to women who have been identified as being at high risk for these abnormalities.
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