Tr Talkers, Llc Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6 Spur Dr, Travelers Rest, SC 29690 Phone: 724-944-4023 |
Mrs. Deborah Ann Arnold, CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 130 Echo Lane, Travelers Rest, SC 29690 Phone: 864-834-9735 |
Taylor Anne Crumpton, MS, CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6 Spur Dr, Travelers Rest, SC 29690 Phone: 724-944-4023 |
Mrs. Emily Mclemore, MSP Speech-Language Pathologist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 3 Rawood Dr, Travelers Rest, SC 29690 Phone: 678-492-7867 |
News Archive
The Medical Research Council has awarded a grant of £3.5m to researchers from Queen Mary University of London and University of Cape Town to carry out a trial to determine whether a weekly vitamin D supplement can prevent tuberculosis (TB) in South African primary school children.
Our members deeply regret the needless tragedies outlined in the Times articles and express our sympathy to the families who have lost loved ones and witnessed their suffering. Our hearts also go out to all others whose lives have been impacted by these tragedies including therapists, physicians and physicists. We feel that, as radiation oncology professionals, we are all, directly or indirectly, responsible for these disastrous treatment errors and we therefore must, in future, take a more active role to assure episodes like these are never repeated.
A Eurac Research study on acclimatisation and de-acclimatisation will take place in the terraXcube centre for the simulation of extreme climates. Internationally renowned, especially for his extreme winter climbs, mountaineer Simone Moro, and Tamara Lunger, one of the world's strongest high-altitude climbers, announce the destination of their next expedition.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine have transformed skin cells from patients with Lou Gehrig's disease, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), into brain cells affected by the progressive, fatal disease and deposited those human-made cells into the first public ALS cell library, enabling scientists to better study the disease.
A new study by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) documents a need for increased injury prevention efforts in many of the most popular activities for kids (walking, bicycling, swimming, sports and playground use) in the United States.
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