Abigail Blauvelt, AGACNP Registered Nurse Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 743 Spring St Ne, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 770-219-2347 |
Terri Kelly, RN, IBCLC Registered Nurse - Lactation Consultant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 825 Jesse Jewell Pkwy Se Ste A, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 770-219-7574 |
Peggy B Guy, Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1290 Athens St, Gainesville, GA 30507 Phone: 770-531-6464 Fax: 770-531-6035 |
Deborah Gilstrap, RNFA Registered Nurse - Medical-Surgical Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1240 Jesse Jewell Pkwy Se, Suite 300, Gainesville, GA 30501 Phone: 770-534-7200 Fax: 770-536-9800 |
News Archive
Biomedical scientists collaborating on translational research at two Buffalo institutions are reporting the discovery of a novel, and heretofore unrecognized, set of genes essential for the growth of potentially lethal, drug-resistant bacteria.
For many young scientists, particularly women, research careers hang precariously between scientific and family responsibilities. That's a balance that the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) hopes to tip towards the plus side with a $60,000 grant from Nature Publishing Group (NPG) to underwrite childcare expenses at the ASCB's career-critical Annual Meetings over the next five years.
It's a longstanding question in biology: How do cells know when to progress through the cell cycle? In simple organisms such as yeast, cells divide once they reach a specific size. However, determining if this holds true for mammalian cells has been difficult, in part because there has been no good way to measure mammalian cell growth over time.
Conventional wisdom holds that malpractice lawsuits are the bane of modern medicine, with high insurance premiums driving doctors from the profession and the threat of lawsuits discouraging health-care employees from reporting and correcting medical mistakes.
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