Phillips County Family Health Clinic Clinic/Center - Rural Health Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 315 Sth 8th Ave E, Malta, MT 59538 Phone: 406-654-1800 Fax: 406-654-1700 |
Malta Medical Associates Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 830 South Central Ave, Malta, MT 59538 Phone: 406-654-2878 Fax: 406-654-2810 |
Jess Np Family Healthcare, Pllc Clinic/Center Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 140 S Central Ave, Malta, MT 59538 Phone: 406-654-1953 Fax: 406-654-5204 |
Newbern Family Healthcare, Llc Clinic/Center - Primary Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 830 South Central Avenue, Malta, MT 59538 Phone: 406-654-1953 |
News Archive
During a hearing of the House Oversight And Government Reform Committee, Republicans tagged this provision as an insurance industry bail-out despite Congressional Budget Office projections cited by Democrats that it ultimately will collect billions of dollars from insurers rather than paying them money.
Angion Biomedica Corp. announced today the establishment of an alliance with Duke University and Massachusetts General Hospital to pursue advanced development and clinical studies of its lead therapeutics for treatment of ischemic stroke.
From the start of the HIV epidemic, it appeared that some of the people who were infected with the virus were able to ward off the fatal effects of the disease longer than others.
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that is associated with emotions, movement, and the brain's pleasure and reward system. In the current issue of Advances in Neuroimmune Biology, investigators provide a broad overview of the direct and indirect role of dopamine in modulating the immune system and discuss how recent research has opened up new possibilities for treating diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, multiple sclerosis or even the autoimmune disorders.
New images of the brain reveal a deceptively simple pattern of organization in the wiring of this complex organ. Instead of nerve fibers travelling randomly through the brain like spaghetti, as some imaging has suggested, the new portraits reveal two-dimensional sheets of parallel fibers ‘crisscrossing' other sheets at right angles in a grid-like structure that folds and contorts with the convolutions of the brain. This same pattern appeared in the brains of humans, rhesus monkeys, owl monkeys, marmosets and galagos, researchers report Thursday in the journal Science.
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