Elizabeth Sinclair-lowry Psychologist - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 671 N King St, Xenia, OH 45385 Phone: 937-372-6461 |
Autumn La Riche, ED.S., NCSP Psychologist - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 819 Colorado Dr, Xenia, OH 45385 Phone: 937-562-9048 |
Debra Joyce Gillespie, ED.S Psychologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 610 Rising Hill Dr, Xenia, OH 45385 Phone: 937-376-7729 |
Julie Shrock, ED.S, NCSP Psychologist - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 829 Colorado Dr, Xenia, OH 45385 Phone: 937-372-1251 |
Jason Parkins Psychologist - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 303 Kinsey Rd, Xenia, OH 45385 Phone: 937-562-9926 |
News Archive
OICR researchers, together with international collaborators, have invented a technique to avoid a major problem with common laboratory techniques and improve the sensitivity of important cancer tests.
eClinicalWorks, a market leader in ambulatory clinical systems, today announces that College Park Family Care Center, the largest non-hospital owned multi-specialty group in the Kansas City-area, has chosen eClinicalWorks comprehensive electronic health records (EHR) solution for its 91 providers across 12 locations.
Successive, vigorous bouts of leg compressions following a stroke appear to trigger natural protective mechanisms that reduce damage, researchers report.
A study in the New England Journal of Medicine has found common surgical interventions and stents, the expensive medical devices used in bypass surgeries, are no more effective at preventing death, heart attacks and strokes in diabetic patients than less expensive drugs, the Wall Street Journal reports. The study, which included 2,368 patients, is representative of new interest in head-to-head comparisons of treatments.
Asthma is reaching epidemic levels in the U.S., with 8 percent of the total population and 10 percent of the African-American population suffering from this disease. Obesity rates are also increasing, now affecting 34 percent of the population.
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