Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Officials from the Jordan Valley Community Health Center hosted an open house Dec. 16 for the Our Healthy Start program. The program, a collaboration with several community partners including St. John’s Health System, Women with Infants and Children, and the Doula Foundation, is intended to increase access to health services for women and their babies. The program will provide obstetrical services through the Jordan Valley center; Certified Nurse Midwife Carla Boone began seeing patients earlier this month, with St. John's obstetricians Dr. David Redfern and Dr. Meera Scarrow overseeing patient care. Funding for the program comes partly from a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Springfield event venue Belamour LLC gained new ownership; The Wok on West Bypass opened; and Hawk Barber & Shop closed on a business purchase that expanded its footprint to Ozark.