Dr. Angelo Sebastian Domingo, PSY.D Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9926 52nd St E, Parrish, FL 34219 Phone: 941-822-6122 |
Julie Nejame, PSY.D. Psychologist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 12271 Us Highway 301 N, Parrish, FL 34219 Phone: 941-776-4000 Fax: 941-845-4963 |
Tiffany Misra, PH D Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 12271 Us Highway 301 N, Parrish, FL 34219 Phone: 941-776-4000 Fax: 941-845-4963 |
Mr. Antoine Roger Jeanmarie, MA, MBA Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2415 129th Ave E, Parrish, FL 34219 Phone: 954-224-4672 |
Shalia L Moore-hayes, PSY. S, NASP Psychologist - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 10205 36th Ct E, Parrish, FL 34219 Phone: 319-504-1899 |
News Archive
With the goal of developing new, more effective and personalized cancer treatments, Horizon Discovery, based in Cambridge, England, has secured from Case Western Reserve University exclusive rights to a panel of new human isogenic cell models developed by the laboratory of Zhenghe Wang, assistant professor of genetics at the university's School of Medicine.
The airways that conduct air into and out of the lung contain secretions - mucus - that trap inhaled particles. These are removed from the lung by a process called mucociliary clearance that moves the mucus, dead cells and inhaled particles and microorganisms towards the throat from where they are swallowed.
For decades, patients with liver disease related to alcohol use have been told they must be sober for six months before they can get a liver transplant.
It has long been known that people with blood type O are protected from dying of severe malaria. In a study published in Nature Medicine, a team of Scandinavian scientists explains the mechanisms behind the protection that blood type O provides, and suggest that the selective pressure imposed by malaria may contribute to the variable global distribution of ABO blood groups in the human population.
New research shows that a tiny piece of RNA has an essential role in ensuring that embryonic tissue segments form properly.
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