Medsupply Corporation Inc Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 7719 Graphics Way, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (740) 879-3657 |
Giant Eagle Pharmacy #6503 Pharmacy Location: 55 Meadow Park Ave, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (740) 657-1344 |
Kroger Pharmacy 805 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 6417 Columbus Pike, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (740) 888-1290 |
Discount Drug Mart 65 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 8951 South Old State Road, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (614) 841-7555 |
Walmart Pharmacy 10-2725 Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 8659 Columbus Pike, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (740) 657-8101 |
Ohiohealth Home Medical Equipment DME Supplier - Oxygen Equipment & Supplies Location: 7708 Green Meadows Dr, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (614) 566-0850 |
Patriot Medical Durable Medical Equipment & Medical Supplies Location: 651 Bear Run Ln, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (614) 888-8452 |
Qual-med Serv, Inc DME Supplier - Nursing Facility Supplies Location: 8556 Cotter Street, Lewis Center, Ohio 43035 Phone: (740) 201-0011 |
News Archive
Nursing mothers who live with two or more smokers are more likely to stop breastfeeding sooner than those who live in nonsmoking households.
A Henry Ford Hospital study has found that better use of commonly accepted diagnostic guidelines for detecting cervical spine injuries could reduce unnecessary CT scans and spare patients from radiation exposure.
Microbiologist Karl Klose, a professor in the UTSA College of Sciences' Department of Biology and a member of the South Texas Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases, has received a contract from the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) to conduct research that would bring scholars one step closer to developing a vaccine against tularemia.
Infants below the age of one may be too young to get the chicken pox vaccine but far fewer of them got the itchy rash after the U.S. started routinely vaccinating older children in 1995, according to a new study.
A single, very unusual family with Tourette syndrome has led Yale School of Medicine researchers to identify a rare mutation in a gene that is required to produce histamine. The finding provides a new framework to understand many years of data on the role of histamine function in the brain and points to a potentially novel approach to treatment of tics and Tourette.
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