Mrs. Bernadette Rebecca Rockwell, M.S. Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1710 Cedarhurst, Benton, AR 72015 Phone: 501-909-9036 |
Warren Keith Norwood, LPE Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3418 Hazelwood Dr, Benton, AR 72015 Phone: 501-317-8910 Fax: 870-772-5965 |
Kelly Eldridge, LPE-I Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 307 E Sevier St, Benton, AR 72015 Phone: 501-315-4224 Fax: 501-776-0411 |
Mary Bonner, PHD Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 307 E Sevier St, Benton, AR 72015 Phone: 501-315-4224 Fax: 501-776-0411 |
Mrs. Andrea Shea Stillwell, PSYD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 307 E Sevier St, Benton, AR 72015 Phone: 501-315-4224 Fax: 501-778-0450 |
Dr. Rebecca Schlau, PSY D Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1212 Military Rd Ste D, Benton, AR 72015 Phone: 501-794-6557 Fax: 501-794-6557 |
Sheryl Vaughn Psychologist - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5807 Riviera Dr, Benton, AR 72019 Phone: 903-335-9126 |
News Archive
An electronic alert system helps clinicians quickly do a bedside assessment to identify children with severe sepsis in an emergency department. Researchers from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia report on their efforts to rapidly recognize this life-threatening condition.
Low-income urban neighborhoods not only have more mosquitoes, but they are larger-bodied, indicating that they could be more efficient at transmitting diseases. So reports a Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies-led study, published in the Journal of Medical Entomology, investigating how socioeconomics influences mosquito-borne disease risk in Baltimore, Maryland.
One news outlet studies the practical meaning of public insurance option by examining some of the approaches that are already in existence. Meanwhile, another examines the number of people who would have access to the public plan. And a former insurance executive takes issue with the industry's current stance.
The preliminary analysis of penalties would lower Medicare payments to these hospitals by 1 percent for a year. Elsewhere, lawmakers introduce legislation to change how hospitals that serve a large number of poor patients are affected by Medicare's penalties.
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