Doctors
in sentence
1293 examples of Doctors in a sentence
Many of the country’s leading artists, scholars, and doctors, having studied in the capitals of Europe, acted as cultural mediators.
But it seems unlikely that such arrangements would be possible in financial services and the major professional services (including doctors, architects, and lawyers), which are important for Britain’s competitors in Europe.
Moreover, those who are no longer in the Medicaid program do not lose care from the many
doctors
who now refuse to serve Medicaid patients because of the low fees allowed in the program.
Doctors
take the “Hippocratic Oath,” pledging first to do no harm.
Perhaps a maximally extended life expectancy is of higher value to you than living in a society where
doctors
do not leave curable patients to die if they cannot pay for the required treatment out of their own pockets.
In reality, this is more of an opportunity than a problem: if we did not expect that
doctors
and nurses will be able to do marvelous things in a generation or two that they cannot do now, we would not be projecting serious fiscal deficits arising from the health programs.
Bernard Kouchner, the founder of
Doctors
Without Borders, wanted the world to intervene in Nigeria in 1970, because he saw the killing of Ibos by Nigerian troops as a genocidal echo of Auschwitz.
While barbers, hairdressers, taxi drivers, bar owners, and
doctors
are often licensed, permits are rarely required to operate a tanning parlor.
What is new is the involvement of
doctors
in fulfilling this desire for self-transformation.
In recent decades,
doctors
have become much more comfortable giving physical treatments to remedy psychological and social problems.
Today
doctors
give synthetic growth hormone to short boys, or Propecia to middle-aged men to remedy the shame of baldness.
But once a pharmaceutical company develops a treatment for a psychiatric disorder, it acquires a financial interest in making sure that
doctors
diagnose the disorder as often as possible.
Though regarded by many as one of the safest and least corrupt societies in the world, Rwanda faces a great shortage of
doctors
and nurses.
To be sure, tax cuts would not address all of the many challenges surrounding access to healthcare in emerging and developing countries, such as the lack of hospitals, clinics, doctors, and public and private insurance.
But while any couple would prefer to conceive a child without the intervention of doctors, that option is not available for infertile couples.
Cuba is the most dramatic case of dependence: Without subsidized Venezuelan petroleum and the enormous sums paid for the Castros’
doctors
– some excellent, some fraudulent – the island’s economy would sink, causing a wave of Cubans to leave, as has occurred repeatedly over the past half-century.
In an attempt to recapture his former popularity, Putin implemented salary increases for teachers, doctors, and police officers, putting regional budgets under strain in the process.
Arogya Parivar is centered on recruiting and training residents of remote villages to become “health educators,” who, along with qualified doctors, organize “health camps” – mobile clinics that provide access to health screenings and a robust portfolio of treatment options.
And more efficient health services might spend less on hospitals and
doctors
and more on encouraging healthy lifestyles.
This spending consumes a large proportion of poorer households’ income, precludes more productive household investments, creates few jobs, and often remains untaxed, as
doctors
and hospitals are frequently paid under the counter.
For a country to export the services of lawyers, doctors, engineers, insurers, accountants, and teachers, other countries must recognize and trust its professional qualifications and broader regulatory regime.
The bigger issue, as the IMS consultancy found last year, is the shortage of doctors, clinics, and hospitals, especially in rural areas.
Even the public clinics and hospitals that do exist are often rendered useless by high rates of absenteeism by
doctors.
Imagine
doctors
at a perpetually overrun hospital refusing to perform triage on casualties, merely attending patients as they arrived and fast-tracking those whose families made the most fuss.
On one side of the Atlantic, American lawyers are prosecuting Nazi
doctors
at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity – so-called “research” carried out on concentration camp prisoners.
During a major meningitis epidemic in northern Nigeria in 1996, the drug company Pfizer supplied
doctors
with the oral antibiotic Trovan, which the firm wanted to test against the most effective known drug, Ceftriaxone, as a “control.”
Sexual abuse in US-operated prisons got worse and worse over time, ultimately including, according to
doctors
who examined detainees, anal sodomy.
But what if Spain - and Europe as a whole - had reacted in the opposite way to the Madrid train bombing of April, saying: "We promise that because of that slaughter we will double our support for stabilization in Iraq by sending twice as many troops, experts, engineers, teachers, policemen, doctors, and billions of euros in support of allied forces and their Iraqi co-workers."
Her internal injuries from the iron rod that her attackers used were so severe that
doctors
had to remove her intestines in their effort to save her life.
An 11-year-old girl raped by a relative will have to carry the pregnancy to term, unless
doctors
(risking prison) determine that the pregnancy will kill her imminently.
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