Allison Soriano, Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 111 Loganberry St, Lake Jackson, TX 77566 Phone: 979-418-1843 |
Melissa Aguilar, Registered Nurse Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 509 Azalea St, Lake Jackson, TX 77566 Phone: 832-830-3309 |
Laura Sinha, RNFA Registered Nurse - Registered Nurse First Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 Oak Dr S Ste 203b, Lake Jackson, TX 77566 Phone: 979-285-2828 |
Patricia Hoffmann, RNFA Registered Nurse - Registered Nurse First Assistant Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 201 Oak Dr S Ste 104, Lake Jackson, TX 77566 Phone: 979-297-3004 Fax: 979-297-3833 |
Bailey Victoria Laday, Registered Nurse - General Practice Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 135 Oyster Creek Dr Ste B, Lake Jackson, TX 77566 Phone: 979-215-2309 Fax: 844-272-3168 |
Michelle Berryhill, Registered Nurse - Home Health Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 106 Rose Trl, Lake Jackson, TX 77566 Phone: 979-487-0332 |
News Archive
Fat bacteria? Skinny bacteria? From our perspective on high, they all seem to be about the same size. In fact, they are.Precisely why has been an open question, according to Rice University chemist Anatoly Kolomeisky, who now has a theory.
Three years ago, Corey Walsh, who was in a relationship with a man who was HIV-positive, got a prescription for Truvada, a drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration to prevent infection with the virus that causes AIDS.
Infant formula and other baby foods that provide permanent protection from obesity and diabetes into adulthood could be on shop shelves soon, reports Lisa Melton in Chemistry & Industry, the magazine of the SCI.
The Associated Press/Washington Times reports on a pilot project plan by Partners In Health (PIH) and GHESKIO to vaccinate Haitians against cholera, which "has set off a debate among some public health experts who question the wisdom of the program that will inoculate only one percent of the population and could deplete the world's stock of available cholera vaccine, potentially putting people at risk in other vulnerable places."
The tremendous potential public health benefits of research with blood samples left over after routine newborn screening must not be lost amidst controversy and litigation, say medical and bioethics experts in a commentary published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
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