Kelly Riechers, CRNA Registered Nurse Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 Hospital Dr, Lebanon, MO 65536 Phone: 417-533-6026 |
Alyssa Jon Harris, CRNA Registered Nurse - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 100 Hospital Dr, Lebanon, MO 65536 Phone: 417-533-6026 |
Dr. Enock Nyamoti, CRNA Registered Nurse Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 100 Hospital Dr, Lebanon, MO 65536 Phone: 417-533-6026 |
Fern M Klein, RN, CDE Registered Nurse - Diabetes Educator Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 874 S Jefferson, Lebanon, MO 65536 Phone: 417-532-3495 Fax: 417-532-3598 |
Mrs. Elaine Britzman, RN, BSN Registered Nurse - Diabetes Educator Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 874 S Jefferson St, Lebanon, MO 65536 Phone: 417-532-3495 Fax: 417-532-3598 |
News Archive
Retailers should be licensed to sell cigarettes, and the licence revoked if they are caught selling tobacco to children, the Australian Medical Association (WA) said today.
Using carbon nanotubes linked to tumor-homing antibodies, a research team headed by Ellen Vitetta, Ph.D., M.D., of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center has shown that they can specifically kill the targeted tumor cells using near-infrared light. This work appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Sagent Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a privately held specialty pharmaceutical company, today announced FDA approval of bacitracin for injection, USP (bacitracin), an anti-infective product used to treat pneumonia and empyema. Bacitracin will be offered in a 50,000 MU, AP-rated, preservative-free, latex-free, single-dose vial packaged both individually and in packages of ten.
Researchers from FIU's Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine Barry P. Rosen and Jian Chen, both from the Department of Cellular Biology and Pharmacology, are part of an international team that has identified how arsenic gets into the seeds of plants such as rice. T
Researchers have been successful in creating sperm-producing germ cells from stem cells in a lab and transferred them into infertile mice, which after the treatment were able to produce healthy offspring. This new development could help thousands of infertile men become fathers if the method proves similarly effective in humans.
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