Dr. Miranda Maria Filippides, PH.D. Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 57 Edwards Access Road, Suite # 16, Edwards, CO 81632 Phone: 970-766-2000 Fax: 970-766-2001 |
Dr. Stephanie Steele, PSYD Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 210 Edwards Village Blvd Unit D208, Edwards, CO 81632 Phone: 303-317-6504 |
Dr. Casey Leigh Angel, PSYD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 439 Edwards Access Rd, Edwards, CO 81632 Phone: 970-455-2489 |
News Archive
This new mobile edition of Drugs.com provides physicians and healthcare professionals with a free drug information service for easy access to medication summaries, dosing information, warnings and built-in drug interactions for all medications commonly used in the U.S. With this tool, physicians and healthcare professionals can protect patients and increase their productivity by being able to quickly find the answers they need to make informed decisions.
Even though nurses routinely disclose nursing errors to their patients, a new study published in the January 2009 issue of The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety shows that nurses often are not included when physicians tell patients about more serious mistakes.
The Los Angeles Times examines several stories of patients too poor to pay their hospital bills in Kenya that were held in a "makeshift patients' prison," until they escape or settle their debt. "Tragically, healthcare horror stories are common in Africa, where developing countries rarely have medical safety nets for the poor. But an increase in cases of cash-starved public hospitals and mortuaries detaining patients and even corpses over unpaid bills is spurring outrage in Kenya," writes the newspaper.
The incidence of dementia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis is lower in patients receiving biologic or targeted synthetic disease modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) than in patients who receive conventional synthetic DMARDs, according to a new study.
Researchers discovered an easily measured gene linked to a high fatality rate, which could be used as a novel prognostic biomarker in patients with a Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) bloodstream infection, according to research presented at the 28th European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.
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