Erika Nicole Henderson, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33820 Old Valley Pike Ste 2, Strasburg, VA 22657 Phone: 540-459-1310 Fax: 540-459-1311 |
Mrs. Elizabeth Lauren Holladay, PA Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33674 Old Valley Pike, Strasburg, VA 22657 Phone: 540-465-3751 |
Mrs. Sarah Anna Marie Schlenz, PAC Physician Assistant Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 33674 Old Valley Pike, Strasburg, VA 22657 Phone: 540-465-3751 Fax: 540-465-5008 |
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"Saying they are 'gravely concerned about reports that the Obama Administration's FY 2014 budget requests for PEPFAR and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria fail to provide adequate resources,' researchers and physicians from programs, centers and institutions leading the international AIDS response sent a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry Friday, urging him to speak up for funding that will back policy and pursue the goal of an AIDS-free generation," the Center for Global Health Policy's "Science Speaks" blog reports.
...than people who do not drink at all. A study published today in the open access journal BMC Public Health shows that consuming no more than a drink or two a few times a week reduces the risk of being obese.
Dr. Sasson Moulavi, M.D., in a recent blog commented that food advertising is such a science that the average consumer does not have any chance of resisting when tempted by high-sugar, high-fat foods. In 2008, food and beverage companies spent $13.44 billion on advertising according to Advertising Age (6/09) and WPP's TNS Media Intelligence reporting.
In a comprehensive analysis and mathematical model of the available scientific data, researchers at the University of York on behalf of the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) in the United Kingdom found that newer drugs used to treat the most common forms of epilepsy are more expensive than older drugs, but produce similar health benefits.
Researchers have isolated a molecule, small enough to be used as a drug, that can shut down a dysfunctional immune response that causes deadly hemorrhagic shock, results in delayed death of heart attack patients, promotes rejection of transplanted organs and destroys joints in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, according to a paper published in Molecular Immunology.
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