Dr. Annie Thanh-yen Du, PSYD Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3900 Newpark Mall Rd, Ste 300, Newark, CA 94560 Phone: 415-270-0909 |
Dr. Linh Ngoc Nguyen, PH.D. Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 39675 Cedar Blvd Ste 240a, Newark, CA 94560 Phone: 510-396-6166 Fax: 510-740-0583 |
Khalil R Rahmany, PHD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 39676 Cedar Blvd, Suite 240a, Newark, CA 94560 Phone: 510-445-1015 Fax: 510-445-1035 |
Ms. Amy Elizabeth Reese Psychologist - Counseling Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 5007 Winsford Ct, Newark, CA 94560 Phone: 510-449-5442 |
Dr. Kelly Horton, PSY.D. Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 39675 Cedar Blvd, Suite 240, Newark, CA 94560 Phone: 510-449-3545 |
News Archive
In childhood, rituals like regular schedules for meal, bath, and bed times are a healthy part of behavioral development. But combined with oral and tactile sensitivities, such as discomfort at the dentist or irritation caused by specific fabrics, these rituals could be an early warning sign of adult Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
The growth of sub-Saharan Africa's agricultural sector in 2008 is a "a break with the past," but "concerted and purposeful policy action" is required for developments to continue, according to a new U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) paper, VOA News reports (De Capua, 9/28).
Malaria is one of the most deadly infectious diseases in the world today, claiming the lives of over half a million people every year, and the recent emergence of parasites resistant to current treatments threatens to undermine efforts to control the disease. Researchers are now onto a new strategy to defeat drug-resistant strains of the parasite. Their report appears in the journal ACS Chemical Biology.
An urgent rethink of infection control policies to keep COVID-19 infection at bay in schools is needed if primary schools are to be kept open this winter, and the knock-on effects on their families avoided, argue children's infectious disease specialists in a viewpoint, published online in the Archives of Disease in Childhood.
› Verified 5 days ago