Drugs
in sentence
2204 examples of Drugs in a sentence
Our process for doing this is essentially transforming biotechnology and pharmacology into an information technology, helping us discover and evaluate
drugs
faster, more cheaply and more effectively.
Prices for ARVs, the
drugs
needed to treat HIV, cost about 12,000 [dollars] per patient per year.
The patents on those
drugs
were held by a number of Western pharmaceutical companies that were not necessarily willing to make those patents available.
Treatment programs became possible, funding became available, and the number of people on antiretroviral
drugs
started to increase very rapidly.
Today, eight million people have access to antiretroviral
drugs.
People who have access to these
drugs
stop dying.
Here you see the patent practices before the World Trade Organization's rules, before '95, before antiretroviral
drugs.
This is what you see today, and this is in developing countries, so what that means is, unless we do something deliberate and unless we do something now, we will very soon be faced with another drug price crisis, because new
drugs
are developed, new
drugs
go to market, but these medicines are patented in a much wider range of countries.
It isn't only the number of
drugs
that are patented.
He has access to antiretroviral
drugs.
Now during the clinical trial, she'd been given all her antiretroviral
drugs
free of charge, and her transportation costs had been covered by the research funds.
She was unable to tell me the names of the
drugs
she'd received during the trial, or even what the trial had been about.
It helps us express ourselves and be happy without the help of alcohol or
drugs.
Well if we can embed biological and chemical networks like a search engine, so if you have a cell that's ill that you need to cure or bacteria that you want to kill, if you have this embedded in your device at the same time, and you do the chemistry, you may be able to make
drugs
in a new way.
We can print
drugs
at point of need.
Secondly, drug companies are not going to develop really sophisticated psychoactive
drugs.
That's how
drugs
work.
And that's where
drugs
come from, and that's why your doctors have amazing powers ... (Laughter) to cure deadly infections and everything else.
This view is conditioned by the fact that many of the
drugs
that are prescribed to treat these disorders, like Prozac, act by globally changing brain chemistry, as if the brain were indeed a bag of chemical soup.
But that can't be the answer, because these
drugs
actually don't work all that well.
These
drugs
have so many side effects because using them to treat a complex psychiatric disorder is a bit like trying to change your engine oil by opening a can and pouring it all over the engine block.
Since the year 2000, since the turn of the millennium, there are eight million more AIDS patients getting life-saving antiretroviral
drugs.
And the Global Fund provides antiretroviral
drugs
that stop mothers from passing HIV to their kids.
Could we, in fact, encourage all the companies that are out there that have
drugs
in their freezers that are known to be safe in humans but have never actually succeeded in terms of being effective for the treatments they were tried for?
How do we know, for instance, whether
drugs
are safe before we give them to people?
And ultimately, because you can do this for the individual, we could even see this moving to the point where the ability to develop and test medicines will be you on a chip, what we're trying to say here is the individualizing of the process of developing
drugs
and testing their safety.
Randomized clinical trials were actually invented in 1948 to help invent the
drugs
that cured tuberculosis, and those are important things, don't get me wrong.
These population studies that we've done have created tons of miracle
drugs
that have saved millions of lives, but the problem is that health care is treating us as averages, not unique individuals, because at the end of the day, the patient is not the same thing as the population who are studied.
So on my chart, I forced them to put, "Patient goal: low doses of
drugs
over longer periods of time, side effects friendly to skiing."
We're going to hear about a biochemical imbalance or we're going to hear about
drugs
or we're going to hear about some very simplistic notion that will take our subjective experience and turn it into molecules, or maybe into some sort of very flat, unidimensional understanding of what it is to have depression or schizophrenia.
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