Lori Lyn Brown, PHD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3135 Boeing Ave Ste A2, Mckinleyville, CA 95519 Phone: 707-630-5093 Fax: 707-630-5093 |
Dr. Patricia Kay Kerig, PHD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2898 Sandpointe Dr, Mckinleyville, CA 95519 Phone: 801-245-0189 |
Dr. Emily Sommerman Psychologist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 3135 Boeing Ave # 3, Mckinleyville, CA 95519 Phone: 707-616-7345 |
Dr. Sarah Catherine Haag, PH.D. Psychologist - Counseling Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1660 Central Ave Ste J, Mckinleyville, CA 95519 Phone: 707-672-2206 Fax: 707-443-3204 |
News Archive
Now that Obamacare has finished with an amazing surge in signups, apparently passing the 7 million mark for the exchanges, there have been two main responses. Republicans are in full-on denial -; the books are cooked! Nobody has paid! It's only because people have been forced to do it! Benghazi! Vince Foster! Meanwhile, progressives are full of caution.
As they pop the champagne corks to celebrate New Year's Eve, drug industry executives will likely be glad to put 2009 behind them. That's because pharmaceutical companies who make top-selling drugs for heart disease, asthma, and many other conditions had a tough year in the midst of mounting market pressures and a global recession.
Children are more likely to have more body fat during childhood if their mother has low levels of Vitamin D during pregnancy, according to scientists at the Medical Research Council Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit (MRC LEU), University of Southampton.
A study published this week in PLoS Medicine finds that four risk factors - smoking, high blood pressure, high blood sugar and obesity - explain a substantial amount of the disparity in life expectancy amongst the "Eight Americas", which are groups of the US population that can be defined by race, and location and socioeconomic features of counties they live in.
Dame Judi Dench, Sir Richard Branson, actress Julie Christies and Sting have added their support to an ex-drugs minister and three former chief constables in calling for the decriminalization of the possession of all drugs. These celebrities together with leading lawyers, academics, artists and politicians have signed an open letter to David Cameron to mark this week's 40th anniversary of the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act. The letter, published in a full-page advertisement in Thursday's Guardian, calls for a "swift and transparent" review of the effectiveness of current drugs policies.
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