Healthcare
in sentence
305 examples of Healthcare in a sentence
In healthcare, we have that first friend — we have the specialist, we have the trauma surgeon, the ICU nurse, the E.R. doctors.
I went back and forth, I saw all sorts of people in healthcare, and no one asked about my home."
The honest answer is that in healthcare, we often treat symptoms without addressing the conditions that make you sick in the first place.
In healthcare, we often pay for volume and not value.
That leads to a second phenomenon that I call the "don't ask, don't tell" approach to upstream issues in
healthcare.
Part of the reason that we have this conundrum is because there are not nearly enough upstreamists in the
healthcare
system.
Now, a root cause analysis, in healthcare, usually says, well, let's look at your genes, let's look at how you're behaving.
By some estimates, we need one upstreamist for every 20 to 30 clinicians in the
healthcare
system.
There are stories out there of Veronica and many more like her, people who are coming to the
healthcare
system and getting a glimpse of what it feels like to be part of something that works, a health care system that stops bouncing you back and forth but actually improves your health, listens to you who you are, addresses the context of your life, whether you're rich or poor or middle class.
These stories are compelling because not only do they tell us that we're this close to getting the
healthcare
system that we want, but that there's something that we can all do to get there.
We need many more of them in the
healthcare
system if we're truly going to have it be effective, to move from a sickcare system to a
healthcare
system.
If we're all able to do this work, doctors and
healthcare
systems, payers, and all of us together, we'll realize something about health.
We can all invest in making sure that we improve the allocation of resources upstream, but at the same time work together and show that we can move
healthcare
upstream.
Hundreds of Cuban doctors volunteered for disaster response, but when they got there, they found a bigger disaster: whole communities with no healthcare, doors bolted shut on rural hospitals for lack of staff, and just too many babies dying before their first birthday.
The nearest
healthcare
was fatal miles away.
Here in the United States, where we have
healthcare
reform, we don't have the professionals we need.
The pursuit of the perfect body is putting pressure on our
healthcare
systems and costing our governments billions of dollars every year.
Migrants send money home for food, for buying necessities, for building houses, for funding education, for funding
healthcare
for the elderly, for business investments for friends and family.
Last fall, I conducted a research study to find out what it is that people want to know about their
healthcare.
Well, when we asked people, "What do you want to know about your healthcare?" people responded with what they want to know about their doctors, because people understand health care to be the individual interaction between them and their doctors.
We don't measure how much a country spends on healthcare, we measure the length and quality of people's lives.
That's because warfare and humanitarian action are going to be concentrated in our cities, and the fight for development, whether you define that as eradicating poverty, universal healthcare, beating back climate change, will be won or lost in the shantytowns, slums and favelas of our cities.
Catadores are assisted by well-being professionals and healthcare, like physicians, dentists, podiatrists, hair stylists, massage therapists and much more.
Because they don't have the kind of basic resources we take for granted, like capital and energy, and basic services like
healthcare
and education are also scarce in those regions.
Now I want to show you how, across emerging markets, entrepreneurs and companies are adopting frugal innovation on a larger scale to cost-effectively deliver
healthcare
and energy to billions of people who may have little income but very high aspirations.
And earlier this year, UCLA Health launched its Global Lab for Innovation, which seeks to identify frugal
healthcare
solutions anywhere in the world that will be at least 20 percent cheaper than existing solutions in the U.S. and yet more effective.
It also tries to bring together innovators from North and South to cocreate affordable
healthcare
solutions for all of humanity.
People were turning on the
healthcare
workers who had come, the heroes who had come to try and help save the community, to help work with the community, and they were unable to access them.
After the Second World War, a lot of countries set up universal
healthcare
systems so that everyone who needed treatment could get it.
The primary healthcare, the R&D, those things would reduce global health equity and make the world more just as well as more safe.
Back
Next
Related words
System
Education
People
Their
Access
About
There
Health
Costs
Countries
Would
Social
Country
Reform
Other
Years
World
Where
Patients
Doctors