Healthcare
in sentence
305 examples of Healthcare in a sentence
Mega agricultural operations often are responsible for poisoning our waterways and our land, and it produces this incredibly unhealthy product that costs us billions in
healthcare
and lost productivity.
Now, the inventors that I've mentioned integrated engineering with
healthcare.
They spent time with the elderly, chatted to their
healthcare
providers and their caregivers.
If we know what it takes to have a
healthcare
system rather than a sick-care system, why don't we just do it?
My belief is that it's almost too painful to articulate our aspirations for our
healthcare
system, or even admit that we have any at all.
That if we are honest with ourselves and listen quietly, that we all harbor one fiercely held aspiration for our healthcare: that it keep us healthy.
This aspiration that our
healthcare
keep us healthy is an enormously powerful one.
And the way I think about this is that
healthcare
is like any other system.
What if we decided to take all the parts of
healthcare
that have drifted away from us and stand firm and say, "No.
What if everything we needed to realize our aspiration for
healthcare
was right there in front of us just waiting to be claimed?
The problem is, once you get a taste of what it's like to realize your aspiration for healthcare, you want more.
So we thought, if we can get individual doctors to prescribe these basic resources for their patients, could we get an entire
healthcare
system to shift its presumption?
What if a small part of that next
healthcare
workforce were the 11 million college students in this country?
I believe that we all have a vision for
healthcare
in this country.
I believe that at the end of the day when we measure our healthcare, it will not be by the diseases cured, but by the diseases prevented.
And most of all, I believe that when we measure healthcare, it will be, not by what the system was, but by what we chose it to be.
This kid told him, you know, you gotta watch the guys, and you gotta go out and find the guys who like to walk, because getting on base by a walk is just as good, and in our
healthcare
system we need to figure out, is that really a good pitch or should we let it go by and not swing at everything? Thanks.
Now, in Canada, we have that great
healthcare
system.
The modern
healthcare
sector has totally collapsed.
My personal favorite, and one that I've studied for many years, is their system of
healthcare.
So bees have social
healthcare.
And when bees have access to good nutrition, they're better able to engage their own natural defenses, their healthcare, that they have relied on for millions of years.
So by having death as a part of the cultural and social fabric of life, people's everyday decisions about their health and
healthcare
are affected.
In reality, the relationship between the living and the dead has its own drama in the U.S.
healthcare
system, where decisions about how long to stretch the thread of life are made based on our emotional and social ties with the people around us, not just on medicine's ability to prolong life.
Perhaps one of the answers to the challenges that are facing the U.S.
healthcare
system, particularly in the end-of-life care, is as simple as a shift in perspective, and the shift in perspective in this case would be to look at the social life of every death.
Poor nutrition, access to water, climate change, deforestation, lack of skills, insecurity, not enough food, not enough healthcare, pollution.
I've worked on healthcare, the environment, economic development, reducing poverty, and as I worked more and more in the social field, I started seeing something that had a profound impact on me and my whole life, in a way.
Today, many people who live in the emerging markets, where 90 percent of the world's population lives, believe that the Western obsession with political rights is beside the point, and what is actually important is delivering on food, shelter, education and
healthcare.
If you travel to Mogadishu, Mexico City or Mumbai, you find that dilapidated infrastructure and logistics continue to be a stumbling block to the delivery of medicine and
healthcare
in the rural areas.
I believe that this American
healthcare
crisis that we've all heard about is an urban design crisis, and that the design of our cities lies at the cure.
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