Mrs. Megan Karee Mcmeen, RN Registered Nurse - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 601 W 8th St, Superior, NE 68978 Phone: 402-879-3257 |
Nicole Marie Ordich, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 E 10th St, Superior, NE 68978 Phone: 402-879-3281 Fax: 402-879-3401 |
Verlene Jeanette Watson, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 E 10th St, Superior, NE 68978 Phone: 402-879-3910 Fax: 402-879-4866 |
Angela Hanson-garver, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 520 E 10th St, Superior, NE 68978 Phone: 402-879-3910 Fax: 402-879-4866 |
News Archive
Use of a medication called pyridostigmine alone or in combination with low-dose midodrine appears to improve standing blood pressure in patients with orthostatic hypotension, a fall in blood pressure associated with postural changes and standing
A group of researchers analyzed the B cell response to SARS-CoV-2 in unexposed individuals.
Great news: The White House says that Healthcare.gov and the 36 federally run insurance exchanges are finally good to go. The only thing missing from Sunday's relentlessly upbeat progress report was President Obama in front of a "Mission Accomplished" banner. Sunday's eight-page report was intended to meet Mr. Obama's deadline for fixing the site after its October 1 debut was a calamity. But the more important goal was political - namely, claiming enough progress to prevent Democrats on Capitol Hill from joining the GOP demand for delaying the individual mandate to buy insurance or even the entire program (12/1).
Saint Louis University Center for Vaccine Development researchers have identified a potential new target for vaccines that activates a part of the immune system not previously known to be protective against Chagas disease, tuberculosis and AIDS, as well as other diseases.
It takes a surprisingly small cluster of brain cells deep within the cerebellum to learn how to serve a tennis ball or line up a hockey shot. Researchers at McGill University led by Kathleen Cullen from the Department of Physiology have discovered that to learn new motor skills, neurons within the cerebellum engage in elegant, virtually mathematical, computations to quickly compare expected and actual sensory feedback. They then quickly readjust, changing the strength of connections between other neurons to form new patterns in the brain in order to accomplish the task at hand.
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