Atrium Health Floyd Cherokee Medical Center Rural Health Clinic Centre Clinic/Center - Rural Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 391 Northwood Dr, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-927-7412 |
Atrium Health Floyd Cherokee Medical Center Rural Health Clinic Cherok Clinic/Center - Rural Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 395 Northwood Dr, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-927-4900 |
Cherokee Clinic Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 395 Northwood Dr, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-927-4900 |
Nelson Internal Medicine, Llc Internal Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 833 Cedar Bluff Rd Ste 100, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-266-1441 |
Centre Clinic Corp Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 395 Northwood Dr, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-927-4900 Fax: 256-927-9151 |
Cherokee Family Healthcare, Llc Clinic/Center Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 819 W Main St, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-630-5467 |
Rural Urgent Care Llc Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1925 W Main St, Ste 120, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-677-4552 Fax: 205-278-8560 |
Perry Medical Clinic, P. C. Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 401 Northwood Dr, Centre, AL 35960 Phone: 256-927-3607 Fax: 256-927-3605 |
News Archive
Jeunesse Global, a network marketing company that dedicates its research to promoting healthy and youthful living, has produced the solution to one of the fundamental causes of cellular aging.
Early warning signs of Huntington's disease have been uncovered in a sheep carrying the human HD mutation, leading the way for new insight into this devastating illness, a new study in Scientific Reports has found.
Results from two early-phase Russian non-randomised vaccine trials (Sputnik V) in a total of 76 people are published today in The Lancet, finding that two formulations of a two-part vaccine have a good safety profile with no serious adverse events detected over 42 days, and induce antibody responses in all participants within 21 days.
"Exposure to high altitude can cause acute mountain sickness (AMS) and, in severe cases, cerebral or pulmonary edema. Capillary leakage has been hypothesized to play a role in the pathogenesis of AMS, although the mechanism of altitude-related illnesses remains largely unknown," writes Gabriel Willmann, M.D., of the University of Tubingen, Germany, and colleagues.
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