Dr. Elias graduated from the St. George's University School of Medicine, St. George's, Greneda in 1990. She works in Peabody, MA and specializes in Internal Medicine. Dr. Elias is affiliated with Exeter Hospital and Lahey Medical Center Peabody.
Casual Closers - Montclair, CA since Jan 2013
Partner
Automobile Club of Southern California Sep 2009 - May 2011
Senior Litigation Paralegal
The Agency Employment Services 2009 - 2009
temp paralegal
Coast National Insurance Co. Dec 2006 - Apr 2009
Litigation paralegal
Kent Daniels & Associates, Inc. 2005 - 2009
temp paralegal
Education:
University of California, Los Angeles 1986 - 1987
Certificate, Corp/Lit Atty Asst Training Program
California State University-Northridge 1977 - 1986
BA, Liberal Studies
Skills:
Westlaw Courts Lexis Wordperfect Personal Injury Product Liability Medical Malpractice Notary Public Wrongful Death Legal Research Litigation Document Review Legal Writing Litigation Support Legal Assistance Ipro Pleadings Trials Depositions Legal Documents Motions Document Drafting Litigation Management Prolaw Lexisnexis
Governor LePage said, No one is doing climate-change research, says Susan Elias, a vector ecologist at the University of Maines Climate Change Institute who worked on the tick-climate research and is developing the broader model for her doctoral dissertation. That message came down from on hi
chool, believes it is too hard to sever parental ties. She has lived with her aunt, Susan Elias, since she was 8 years old, but hasnt been adopted because her father wouldnt relinquish custody, so shes still in foster care under the protection of Cook County, Illinois, while living in Dayton. I am
work and skills on deer ticks and how they produce and spread Lyme disease. In an article published in the Portland Press Herald's comprehensive coverage of Lyme disease in Maine, staff writer Deirdre Fleming quoted Maine Medical Center biologist Susan Elias: "'Ticks are showing up earlier this year.
had (tick) submissions earlier this year. After those two warm days we had in March, they really started rolling in," said Susan Elias, a biologist at Maine Medical Center's Vector-borne Disease Laboratory in South Portland, where biologists work to control tick-borne diseases, primarily Lyme disease.