Michael Ryan Hutton, FNP-C Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 86 Medical Group, Unit 3215, Ramstein Ab, Apo, AE 09094 Phone: 314-479-2273 |
Ms. Tina Kilgore, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Usa Meddac Bavaria, Cmr 411, Bldg 700 Rose Barracks, Apo, AE 09112 Phone: 499-662-833321 |
Jennifer Bertram Mcwhorter, RN BSN Registered Nurse - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Usa Meddac Bavaria, Cmr 411 Bldg 700 Rose Barracks, Apo, AE 09112 Phone: 499-662-834719 Fax: 499-662-843721 |
Mrs. Lilen Liwanag Dela Cruz, R.N Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Us Army Health Clinic Katterbach, Cmr454, Apo, AE 09250 Phone: 098-028-33303 |
Jennifer Marie Mezzomo-dempsey, RN Registered Nurse - Ambulatory Care Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Cmr 411 Bldg 700 Rose Barracks, Bmeddac Headquarters, Apo, AE 09112 Phone: 011-499-662834719 |
Ms. Patrielle R Johnson, BSN,RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: Psc 827, Box 1000, Apo, AE 09617 Phone: 081-811-6471 |
News Archive
NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Quality Systems, Inc. and a leading provider of healthcare information systems and connectivity solutions, today announced an agreement with the American Medical Association (AMA), the nation's largest physician organization, to offer physicians NextGen® Ambulatory EHR and NextGen® Practice Management on a new AMA online platform.
To understand the viral load in different sections of infected individuals, their respective shedding patterns, and the sensitivity of the SARS-CoV-2 assays, researchers published a study.
An Ohio Federal Court of Appeals ruling issued yesterday is reinstating the late victim's claim that the recalled diet drug Redux (commonly called fen-phen) linked to her death should never have been marketed to the American people by Wyeth due in part to its pre-approval concerns about potentially lethal side effects.
In recent years, scientists have studied the possibility of using engineered human adenoviruses as vaccines against diseases such as HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria. In this approach, adenoviruses, which commonly cause respiratory-tract infections, are rendered relatively harmless before they are used as vectors to deliver genes from pathogens, which in turn stimulate the body to generate a protective immune response.
› Verified 1 days ago