Dr. Vetter graduated from the University of North Dakota College of Medicine in 1988. He works in West Fargo, ND and specializes in Family Medicine. Dr. Vetter is affiliated with Essentia Health.
Isbn (Books And Publications)
Oceanography Information Sources/70: A Staff Report of the Committee on Oceanography, Division of Earth Sciences, National Research Council
Tammy Horne, Helena Barber, Sherman Powell, Kimberly Benson, Bobby Jamison, Elizabeth Jones, Bonnie Martz, Dennis Straub, Vivian Futrell, Monica Marshburn
Essentia Health chief medical officer Richard Vetter says the Fargo hospital currently has the largest number of COVID patients since last fall. He says the entire medical system, from clinics to intensive care, is at capacity.
Date: Sep 24, 2021
Category: More news
Source: Google
Infected youth behind Fargo-Moorhead's jump in COVID-19 cases | INFORUM
Dr. Richard Vetter, chief medical officer at Essentia Health in Fargo, estimates that about 30% of the population is hesitant to get vaccinated. Public education campaigns will strive to overcome that hesitancy.
Richard Vetter, a retired Mayo Clinic scientist who is also in the Rochester support group, says the debate has caused anxiety for some fellow survivors. "They're dealing with a significant quality-of-life issue, and they're wondering if they made the right decision," he said.
assium iodide pills are meant to flood the thyroid with ordinary iodine in the hope that it will prevent the gland from taking in the radioactive type. The drug may be unnecessary in many cases, but for most people there is no harm in taking it. And if radioactive iodine has started building up in the thyroid, the pills can help get rid of it, said Dr. Richard Vetter, a professor emeritus of biophysics at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.