FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
The Company has made in this report, and from time to time may otherwise make in
its public filings, press releases, and discussions by Company management,
forward-looking. | May 4, 2023
Hospital recognized for exceptional laboratory services for patients inmaricopa.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from inmaricopa.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Evidence regarding the relationship between serum vitamin C levels and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is limited. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate whether serum vitamin C levels are independently associated with HPV infection. Data for this cross-sectional study were obtained from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2003–2006. A total of 2174 women, 18–59 years of age, were enrolled in this study. The associations between serum vitamin C levels (continuous and categorical forms) and cervicovaginal HPV infection were estimated using weighted logistic regression. The adjusted binary logistic regression showed that serum vitamin C was not associated with the risk of HPV infection after adjusting for age, race, poverty income ratio, alcohol consumption, smoking, body mass index, education, and health condition (odds ratio [OR] 0.998, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.994–1.001). Serum vitamin C levels were converted from a continuous
Jjay Grazette, laboratory technician for Key West Medical Center, was recently surveyed with no citations and has met all the criteria for Laboratory Accreditation by COLA Inc., a leading national
Patient claims N.J. lab exposed countless residents to COVID-19 by giving wrong tests
Updated Dec 12, 2020;
Less than a week after the FBI urged anyone who got a COVID-19 test at an Atlantic County laboratory to get retested, one patient filed a lawsuit against the lab, claiming the lab advertised and administered the wrong tests, exposing people and their families to sickness and death.
Attorneys for Dana Kares, a Burlington County resident, sued Infinity Diagnostics Laboratory, of Ventnor City, for advertising finger-prick blood tests as effective tests to detect COVID-19, despite being meant to detect antibodies. The lab advertised the finger-prick blood tests as as a “COVID test”, “COVID Testing” or “rapid 10-minute testing” for COVID-19, according to the complaint.