Drugs
in sentence
2204 examples of Drugs in a sentence
And then, telling me this story, Frankie said, "You know ... God,
drugs
really make you stupid."
We're actually interviewing people on the street, in the places where they're hanging out and taking
drugs.
But once they've gone from being transgressive people whose behaviors we don't want to condone to being AIDS victims, we come over all compassionate and buy them incredibly expensive
drugs
for the rest of their lives.
It's being used now to track where counterfeit
drugs
have been made, where banknotes have come from, to look at the provenance of antiques and see that they really did come from the place the seller said they did.
He killed 400,000 of his people by insisting that beetroot, garlic and lemon oil were much more effective than the antiretroviral
drugs
we know can slow the course of AIDS.
I blamed people of color for the crime and violence and the
drugs
in the city, completely neglecting the fact that I was committing acts of violence on a daily basis, and that in many cases, it was white supremacists who were funneling
drugs
into the inner cities.
So what the Western countries, developed countries, have generously done is they have proposed to provide free
drugs
to all people in Third World countries who actually can't afford these medications.
But there is a fundamental problem that is killing the efforts in fighting this disease, because if you keep throwing
drugs
out at people who don't have diagnostic services, you end up creating a problem of drug resistance.
And in the 20th century, randomized, controlled trials have revolutionized medicine by allowing us to distinguish between
drugs
that work and
drugs
that don't work.
You can put social innovation to the same rigorous, scientific tests that we use for
drugs.
You saw one reference to that in what we were able to do with AIDS
drugs.
When I got out of office and was asked to work, first in the Caribbean, to try to help deal with the AIDS crisis, generic
drugs
were available for about 500 dollars a person a year.
The first country we went to work in, the Bahamas, was paying 3,500 dollars for these
drugs.
Then we went to work with the manufacturers of AIDS medicines, one of whom was cited in the film, and negotiated a whole different change in business strategy, because even at 500 dollars, these
drugs
were being sold on a high-margin, low-volume, uncertain-payment basis.
We now have the money, given these low prices, to distribute AIDS
drugs
all over the world to people we cannot presently reach.
Less than three-tenths of one percent had to transfer to the more expensive second-line
drugs.
It has been an honor for me, particularly, to work in Rwanda where we also have a major economic development project in partnership with Sir Tom Hunter, the Scottish philanthropist, where last year we, using the same thing with AIDS drugs, cut the cost of fertilizer and the interest rates on microcredit loans by 30 percent and achieved three- to four-hundred percent increases in crop yields with the farmers.
So we created a cocktail of antiangiogenic
drugs
that could be mixed into his dog food, as well as an antiangiogenic cream, that could be applied on the surface of the tumor.
There are 12 different drugs, 11 different cancer types.
And using this system, we can test the potency of cancer
drugs.
And here are some common
drugs
that have been associated with reducing the risk of cancer in people.
And here are the dietary factors going head-to-head against these
drugs.
You can see they clearly hold their own, and in some cases, they're more potent than the actual
drugs.
JC: So these
drugs
aren't exactly in mainstream cancer treatments right now.
The Angiogenesis Foundation is following almost 300 companies, and there are about 100 more
drugs
in that pipeline.
Now, in the 27 years since HIV was identified as the cause of AIDS, we've developed more
drugs
to treat HIV than all other viruses put together.
These
drugs
aren't cures, but they represent a huge triumph of science because they take away the automatic death sentence from a diagnosis of HIV, at least for those who can access them.
In fact, neuroleptic
drugs
that are used to eliminate psychotic behavior, things like paranoia, delusions and hallucinations, these are patternicities.
And if you give them
drugs
that are dopamine antagonists, they go away.
And Juanderson, instead, went into what provided kind of opportunity and hope in the place that he lived, which was the
drugs
trade.
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