David Keith Merrifield, CSA Physician Assistant - Surgical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Contant 11-3kb, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-774-3003 Fax: 340-776-3029 |
Eric Harl, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 6500 Red Hook Plz Ste 205, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-775-2303 |
Mrs. Jamie Morgan Schmidt, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6500 Red Hook Plz Ste 205, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-775-2303 |
Ms. Faith Arleen Lake, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9048 Sugar Estate, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-714-3278 Fax: 340-714-3279 |
Miss Charmaine Geraldine Bellot, PA Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9048 Sugar Est, Roy L Schneider Hospital, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-776-8311 Fax: 340-714-6322 |
Miss Nachet J. Williams-prince, MS, PA-C Physician Assistant - Medical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4605 Tutu Park Mall Ste 207, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-775-3700 Fax: 340-777-7927 |
Kelli Hargrave Smolarz, PA-C Physician Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9149 Estate Thomas, Suite 205, St Thomas, VI 00802 Phone: 340-779-2663 |
News Archive
A new study by Weill Cornell Medical College researchers shows that adolescents' reactions to threat remain high even when the danger is no longer present. According to researchers, once a teenager's brain is triggered by a threat, the ability to suppress an emotional response to the threat is diminished which may explain the peak in anxiety and stress-related disorders during this developmental period.
International African Vaccinology Conference, Cape Town, South Africa-Results from a pivotal, large-scale Phase III trial, published online today in the New England Journal of Medicine, show that the RTS,S malaria vaccine candidate can help protect African infants against malaria.
Technion researchers have built pancreatic tissue with insulin-secreting cells, surrounded by a three-dimensional network of blood vessels. The engineered tissue could pave the way for improved tissue transplants to treat diabetes.
In a discovery that could offer valuable new insights into understanding, diagnosing and even treating autism, Harvard scientists for the first time have linked a specific neurotransmitter in the brain with autistic behavior.
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