Hospitals
in sentence
685 examples of Hospitals in a sentence
Thanks to Henry, church property was seized;
hospitals
closed, and precious monastic libraries lost forever, all to enrich the Crown.
The best advice from
hospitals
and doctors, the best medications from pharmaceutical companies to treat the congestive heart failure of my grandmother didn't work because they didn't acknowledge the systemic racism that she had dealt with since birth.
But
hospitals
are buying it faster than any other model.
We built
hospitals.
They've also built universities and
hospitals
and financial institutions.
It’s up to us to decide the best course forward as CRISPR leaves single-celled organisms behind and heads into labs, farms, hospitals, and organisms around the world.
I covered 18 of the top US teaching hospitals, and the story was the same.
And then back to the States to recuperate at veterans' hospitals, such as here in Walter Reed.
There are government clinics and
hospitals
nearby, but they're not enough to handle the poor who live in the area.
And that is so that people in poorer countries can have a chance to heighten their standard of living by building some of the infrastructure that we have already built, such as roads, schools, hospitals, clean drinking water, electricity, and so on.
She told me about her journey of being in and out of
hospitals
and rehabs trying to get sober, and when she did, the health care providers and doctors wouldn't use the correct female name or pronouns.
We called doctors and
hospitals
and asked them what they would accept as a cash payment for simple procedures.
There are a lot of people who are going to in-network
hospitals
and getting out-of-network bills.
We set off a huge conversation about costs involving doctors and hospitals, yes, but also their patients, or as we like to call them, people.
Rustin not only worked with the DC police and
hospitals
to prepare, but organized and trained a volunteer force of 2,000 security marshals.
The particle accelerator in question is called a cyclotron, and it’s often housed in a bunker within
hospitals.
And in 2014 we created Zipline, which is a company that uses electric autonomous aircraft to deliver medicine to
hospitals
and health centers on demand.
We serve about 12 hospitals, and we're adding
hospitals
to that network at an accelerating rate.
All of those
hospitals
only receive blood in this way, and most of those
hospitals
actually place multiple orders every day.
If you want to solve access, you stock a lot of medicine at the last mile, at
hospitals
or health centers, and then patients have the medicine they need.
Because doctors can get what they need instantly, they actually stock less blood at the
hospitals.
So although use of blood products has increased substantially at all the
hospitals
we serve, in the last nine months, zero units of blood have expired at any of these
hospitals.
A couple months ago, a 24-year-old mother came into one of the
hospitals
that we serve, and she gave birth via C-section.
You can see a 75-kilometer service radius around the distribution center, and that allows us to serve hundreds of health facilities and hospitals, all of which are rural, from that single distribution center.
And from these distribution centers, we expect to be doing several hundred lifesaving deliveries every day, and this system will ultimately serve over 1,000 health facilities and
hospitals
in the country.
So we began, through our nonprofit institute, training
hospitals
around the country, and we found that most people could avoid surgery.
In May of 2018, we began recruiting 1,000 mothers living below the federal poverty line shortly after they gave birth in a number of American
hospitals.
So we had started with work on stress, which had enabled us to build lots of sensors that were gathering high quality enough data that we could leave the lab and start to get this in the wild; accidentally found a whopper of a response with the seizure, neurological activation that can cause a much bigger response than traditional stressors; lots of partnership with
hospitals
and an epilepsy monitoring unit, especially Children's Hospital Boston and the Brigham; and machine learning and AI on top of this to take and collect lots more data in service of trying to understand these events and if we could prevent SUDEP.
And in
hospitals
all around the world, a new protocol is being developed to use a toxin from a marine snail for anesthetics.
It’s an increasingly common sight in
hospitals
around the world: a nurse measures our height, weight, blood pressure, and attaches a glowing plastic clip to our finger.
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