Felicia Skipper Berkeley, R.N. Registered Nurse - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 315 E Queen St, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-403-2500 Fax: 864-646-8016 |
Mrs. Sharon S Cothran, ADN Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 315 E Queen St, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-403-2308 Fax: 864-646-8011 |
Claudia Brabham, RN, IBCLC Registered Nurse - Lactation Consultant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 135 Cantrell Rd, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-650-2114 |
Mrs. Heidi Brooks Mccaulley, RN Registered Nurse - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 458 Riverside St, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-403-2200 Fax: 864-646-8025 |
Mrs. Angela Jean Langdale, RN Registered Nurse - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 315 E Queen St, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-403-2600 |
Mrs. Kristi Walters Martin, R.N., BSN Registered Nurse - School Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 2850 Lebanon Rd, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-403-2400 Fax: 864-716-3654 |
Catherine Walker Zocchi, DNP Registered Nurse Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 5304 Highway 76, Pendleton, SC 29670 Phone: 864-261-9100 |
News Archive
A new study suggests that even light-to-moderate alcohol consumption may increase overall cancer risk.
The Sixty-third World Health Assembly, which brought together Health Ministers and senior health officials from the World Health Organization Member States, concluded business and closed Friday evening.
A Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine and MetroHealth System researcher, along with Cleveland Clinic's director of metabolic research, have received federal funding to determine if childhood obesity can be prevented before women become pregnant.
The Medical Research Council (MRC) is to fund a research proposal from a team at the North East England Stem Cell Institute (NESCI) for a project to find ways of improving the efficiency of therapeutic cloning - a technique which would allow scientists to create patient-specific stem cells and develop regenerative therapies for many debilitating conditions such as diabetes, heart disease and Parkinson's disease.
Research from the ESRC International Centre for Lifecourse Studies at UCL suggests direct biological effects of stress during unemployment may help explain the increased mortality and morbidity among jobseekers.
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