Webster City Medical Services Pc Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1610 Collins St, Suite A, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-832-6123 Fax: 515-832-3397 |
Aguirrefamily Care Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1505 Lynx Ave, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-606-4551 |
Heffernan Enterprises Pllc Clinic/Center Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1527 Superior St, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-832-3033 |
Van Diest Medical Center Clinic Clinic/Center - Rural Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2350 Hospital Dr, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-832-7800 Fax: 515-832-9498 |
Mofle Family Care Clinic, P.c. Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1505 Lynx Avenue, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-606-4551 Fax: 515-606-4946 |
Rvision Health Of Iowa P.c. Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 848 2nd Street, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 877-893-4792 |
Infinity Dermatology Pllc Clinic/Center Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 903 Willson Ave, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-297-3701 |
Advanced Family Medicine Pc Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 903 Willson Ave, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-832-3332 Fax: 515-832-1114 |
Webster City Clinic Clinic/Center - Rural Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1924 Superior St, Webster City, IA 50595 Phone: 515-832-3332 Fax: 515-832-1114 |
News Archive
Much like shoelaces or dangly necklaces, DNA strands can tangle up in unruly knots. Specialized enzymes keep DNA organized when cells divide, so the cells split smoothly and don't get stuck. But in tumor cells, this failsafe allows cancer to spread.
Heart disease risk assessment tools commonly used by physicians often underestimate the cardiovascular disease danger faced by rheumatoid arthritis patients, a Mayo Clinic study has found. Inflammation plays a key role in putting those with rheumatoid arthritis in greater jeopardy for heart disease, yet many cardiovascular disease risk assessment methods do not factor it in, the researchers note.
Patients who have had a heart attack and are treated with a high dose of a statin drug did not have significant reduction in the primary outcome of major cardiac events (coronary death, nonfatal acute heart attack, or cardiac arrest with resuscitation), but did appear to have reduced risk when certain secondary outcomes (composite end points of any coronary heart disease event) were examined, according to a study in the November 16 issue of JAMA.
Acromio-clavicular joint dislocation is one of the most common shoulder injuries orthopedic surgeons treat. Severe dislocations are often treated with surgery, but patients who opt for non-surgical treatment typically experience fewer complications and return to work sooner, according to new research published today in the Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma.
Noting U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for an AIDS-free generation last November in a speech at the National Institutes of Health, GlobalPost's "Global Pulse" blog reports on a discussion held Saturday at the Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS), during which "several AIDS experts and U.S. officials gave their views on what it meant to reach an AIDS-free generation - and when it would happen."
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