Samuel Dewayne Oldham, PSYD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 224 W. D.l. Ingram Ave, Bldg 1408, Cannon Afb, NM 88103 Phone: 575-904-3917 |
Dr. Andrea Theye, PSY. D. Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 27th Special Operations Medical Group, 224 W D. L. Ingram Avenue, Bldg. 1408, Cannon Afb, NM 88103 Phone: 575-784-1108 |
Marcia Marie Middel, PH.D. Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 27th Special Operations Medical Group, 224 D. L. Ingram Ave Bld. 1408, Cannon Afb, NM 88103 Phone: 575-904-3951 |
Dr. Nadia Teale, PHD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 208 W Dl Ingram Ave, 27 Somdg, Cannon Afb, NM 88103 Phone: 575-784-1108 |
Dr. June Ellen Shepherd, PH.D. Psychologist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Mental Health Clinic, 27 Th Special Operations Group, 208 Casablanca, Cannon Afb, NM 88103 Phone: 575-784-1108 |
Dr. Bryan W Bovitz, PHD Psychologist - Clinical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 208 Casablanca Ave., 27 Sgomh, Cannon Afb, NM 88101 Phone: 575-784-1108 Fax: 575-784-4624 |
News Archive
Dr. Richer, speaking at his 4th annual Nutrition & The Eye conference, April 16-17, hosted by the College of Optometry at the University of Missouri in St. Louis, says molecular medicine is beginning to provide hope for patients with declining sight when all other therapies have been exhausted.
Three students from Rochester Institute of Technology were recognized for their research findings about improvements to bio-separation techniques for lab-on-a-chip medical devices. They were awarded top honors in several categories in the undergraduate and graduate research competitions at the American Institute of Chemical Engineers annual meeting and conference in November in Salt Lake City, Utah.
But now, by simultaneously revving up the immune system and choking off the tumor's oxygen supply, oncologists at Jefferson Medical College and the Kimmel Cancer Center at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia may have found a better way to battle this deadly cancer.
What if an experimental treatment for an aggressive breast cancer had the potential to save women's lives, but nobody could use it because there was no money to develop and test it? With funding sources for research and development more scarce than in the past, it is not an unusual situation. It's a problem that Sourav Sinha, a Master's degree candidate at Rutgers' Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, is working to tackle head-on.
Back in the 1990s, the federal government tried an unusual social experiment: It offered thousands of poor women in big-city public housing a chance to live in more affluent neighborhoods. A decade later, the women who relocated had lower rates of diabetes and extreme obesity -; differences that are being hailed as compelling evidence that where you live can determine your health.
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