Delivery
in sentence
804 examples of Delivery in a sentence
New materials will also be necessary to overcome one of the main obstacles to successful gene therapy: the absence of appropriate
delivery
systems.
Likewise, the non-invasive
delivery
of complex molecules such as peptides or proteins remains a major challenge.
But if scientists can develop better
delivery
systems or synthetic agents that are safer, cheaper, and easier to manufacture, enormous opportunities will be created for complex drugs that could be given without injections.
This is particularly problematic in countries where health-care
delivery
is based on a fee-for-service model.
As China has opened up its economy, deepened reforms, and become increasingly market-oriented, the government has facilitated the continuous monetization of resources – including natural resources, labor, capital, and technology – by ensuring their constant
delivery
to the market.
Rather than making really substantive improvements in the quantity and quality of aid delivery, not to mention finding a path towards better governance in Africa, they chose a desperate plea for photo ops with Bono and Angelina Jolie.
From pretty much anywhere in the world, one can now search out goods and services, compare prices from multiple sellers, and give detailed shipping and
delivery
instructions, all with a mouse click or a screen tap.
The US lacks the ability to identify, locate, and destroy all three categories of nuclear targets: warheads, bomb production infrastructure, and
delivery
vehicles.
It would limit each country to 1,550 strategic warheads on 700 deployed
delivery
vehicles.
Connectivity is a prerequisite for the
delivery
of new mobile and digital services in e-commerce, vocational training, health care, and finance, all of which could substantially increase overall welfare.
His first proposed budget would slash funding for social programs, efforts to reduce drug use and trafficking, the arts, climate science, medical research, education, Meals on Wheels (food
delivery
for the elderly), financial assistance for low-income college students, the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, and much else.
That money ultimately comes from individuals and employers who pay it in taxes, insurance premiums, or direct payments, and should be intercepted somewhere between the payers and the health-care
delivery
system.
These efforts have generally focused on methods for improving water sanitation and energy
delivery.
They then take
delivery
on their premises so that overall refined inventories rise, but that increase is not part of reported commercial inventories.
Today’s transformational advances in health care owe much to new genomics information, to the availability of big data to influence decisions in real time, to more targeted and individualized therapies, and to smarter, more connected
delivery
systems.
Based on past experience with quotas around the world, the predictable result would be reduced quality control and longer
delivery
times, because exporters would have no reason to compete for new customers.
Yet it is crucial to “bending” the sector’s cost curve, because it enables the
delivery
of quality health care in cost-effective ways.
The ACA has been changing that, by establishing myriad new incentives to foster efficiency in health-care
delivery
– for example, by reducing costly and unnecessary hospital infections and readmissions, and by adopting electronic health records.
Most important, the ACA is providing incentives for the creation of “affordable care organizations,” “bundled payment systems,” and other
delivery
innovations to encourage better coordination of care, especially for patients with numerous chronic conditions.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (which provide health insurance to pensioners and the poor) has just announced its second round of grants – $665 million to 28 states, three territories, and the District of Columbia – to encourage innovations in health-care
delivery.
Arkansas has moved 20 different “episodes” of health-care
delivery
(including hip and knee replacements, pregnancy, colonoscopies, asthma, and congestive heart failure) from fee-for-service to paying for quality outcomes.
The results so far are promising – not just by reining in costs, but also by better aligning service
delivery
with best practices.
Its founders’ mission was to create a system that serves everyone, is free at the point of delivery, and caters to patients’ needs, not their ability to pay.
The Assad regime is responsible for the highest number of civilian casualties by far, having carried out indiscriminate attacks in populated opposition-held areas, besieged entire populations, blocked the
delivery
of humanitarian aid, and tortured and executed prisoners.
And here, the EU confronts a huge
delivery
gap.
Europe’s agenda for the next five years must aim high, particularly on reform and
delivery.
This will not only reduce the overall cost of vaccine procurement and delivery; it will also make it easier for health-care workers and the girls themselves.
Delivery
problems abound in the war zones, but not everywhere.
The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their means of
delivery
is a threat to both the NATO allies and Russia.
But boosting aid to countries that are already aid-dependent requires clearer
delivery
mechanisms and a degree of budgetary predictability.
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