Ocular Prosthetics Lab, Inc Prosthetic/Orthotic Supplier Location: 2845 N Harbor City Blvd, Melbourne, Florida 32935 Phone: (321) 259-3847 |
Alphamedics Inc Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 1101 W Hibiscus Blvd, Melbourne, Florida 32901 Phone: (321) 327-5690 |
Brevard Eye Center Eyewear Supplier (Equipment, not the service) Location: 665s Apollo Blvd, Melbourne, Florida 32901 Phone: (321) 984-3200 |
The Eye Institute For Medic Medicare Supplier Location: 1995 W Nasa Blvd, Melbourne, Florida 32904 Phone: (321) 772-4443 |
Florida Eye Associates Inc Medicare Supplier Location: 502 E New Haven Ave, Melbourne, Florida 32901 Phone: (321) 727-2020 |
Florida Eye Associates Inc Medicare Supplier Location: 5510 Murrell Rd, Melbourne, Florida 32940 Phone: (321) 727-2020 |
Brevard Vision Care Medicare Supplier Location: 2420 S Babcock St, Melbourne, Florida 32901 Phone: (321) 725-4755 |
News Archive
St. Jude Medical, Inc., a global medical device company, today announced Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare approval and reimbursement approval of its Therapy Cool Path Ablation Catheter. This marks the company's first entry into the irrigated catheter ablation market in Japan.
Treating patients with dementia can be viewed as a difficult task for doctors, but Penn State College of Medicine researchers say that storytelling may be one way to improve medical students' perceptions of people affected by the condition. Participation in a creative storytelling program called TimeSlips creates a substantial improvement in student attitudes.
Mothers born in India and Sri Lanka are three times more likely to suffer from extreme nausea and vomiting in pregnancy (hyperemesis gravidarum) than ethnic Norwegians.
An international research team comprising neuroscientists at Virginia Tech, University College London and the University of London revealed brain mechanisms and functional regions that underlie confirmation bias - a phenomenon where people strongly favor information that reinforces their existing opinions over contradictory ones.
Researchers at the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and the Swiss National Center of Competence in Research in Molecular Oncology in Lausanne have developed a new test to predict how breast cancer patients respond to chemotherapy, which could help change how treatment is delivered in the future.
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