Mr. Dino Pascual, R.N. Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 25 Port Imperial Avenue, Apt. 111, West New York, NJ 07093 Phone: 213-568-5627 |
Sarah Bernabe-cullen, RN, BSN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 72 67th St, West New York, NJ 07093 Phone: 201-759-1263 |
Ms. Inverness Marie Howard, RN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 318 54th St, Suite 4e, West New York, NJ 07093 Phone: 201-431-6088 |
Diana Terry, Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7000 Boulevard E Apt 20a, West New York, NJ 07093 Phone: 718-541-7496 |
Yoel Cuba-pacheco, Registered Nurse - Home Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6135 Bergenline Ave Ste 4, West New York, NJ 07093 Phone: 609-857-2296 Fax: 609-857-2295 |
News Archive
Steven Goldstein, MD, President of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM), presented Presidential Recognition Awards to David Bahner, MD, RDMS, Bryann Bromley, MD, and Glynis Harvey, CAE, at the AIUM 2014 Annual Convention in Las Vegas, Nevada.
If you see your partner flirt with someone else, you may feel hurt, angry, and jealous. The last thing you might expect is to start thinking of yourself more like your rival. New research suggests just that: that jealousy can prompt people to change how they view themselves relative to competitors for their partners' attention.
It's a topic that is discussed so infrequently - for reasons that are easy to understand - that it may seem it isn't much of a problem. But new research shows that fecal incontinence is prevalent among U.S. women, especially those in older age groups
Many organisational conflicts arise from personality clashes. In fact, one of the most common reasons that people give for leaving the company they are working for is that they don't like their boss or their colleagues.
A study in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, published by Elsevier, reports that many of the former child soldiers of Sierra Leone have been accepted by their families and communities as they try to overcome their childhood trauma, according to a team led by Boston College School of Social Work Salem Professor in Global Practice, Theresa S. Betancourt.
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