Mrs. Becky Hoffman Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1060 Albright Mckay Rd Ne, Brookfield, OH 44403 Phone: 330-307-4420 |
Mrs. Loretta Anderson, SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 614 Bedford Rd Se, Brookfield, OH 44403 Phone: 330-619-5709 |
Brookfield Local Schools Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 614 Bedford Rd Se, Brookfield, OH 44403 Phone: 330-448-4930 |
News Archive
Juice extracted from North American lowbush blueberries, biotransformed with bacteria from the skin of the fruit, holds great promise as an anti-obesity and anti-diabetic agent. The study, published in the International Journal of Obesity, was conducted by researchers from the Universit- de Montr-al, the Institut Armand-Frappier and the Universit- de Moncton who tested the effects of biotransformed juices compared to regular blueberry drinks on mice.
A research team at Yale University has found that blocking a kind of cell death called apoptosis in fibrotic diseases of the lung, also blocks the fibrosis, opening new ways of looking at treatment for lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis.
Researchers at the University of Louisville have confirmed that using the heat profile from a person's blood, called a plasma thermogram, can serve as an indicator for the presence or absence of cervical cancer, including the stage of cancer.
A majority of patients can't recall whether their physician mentioned their blood pressure numbers and among patients with high blood pressure, only 56 percent say they talked with their doctor about ways to reduce their high blood pressure, according to a new survey released today by the American Medical Group Foundation, the nonprofit education and research arm of the American Medical Group Association.
A new UCLA study finds that doctors who follow guidelines recommending the delay of antiretroviral therapy for non-adherent HIV patients are likelier to put off that treatment for Latinos, women and poor patients than they do for others. In addition, doctors are slower to prescribe protease inhibitors for African American patients whether or not the physician follows the guidelines.
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