Hospitals
in sentence
685 examples of Hospitals in a sentence
And over time, we have grown into a network of five hospitals, predominately in the state of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, and then we added several, what we call Vision Centers as a hub-and-spoke model.
And then more recently we started managing
hospitals
in other parts of the country and also setting up
hospitals
in other parts of the world as well.
We proactively and systematically promoted these practices to many
hospitals
in India, many in our own backyards and then in other parts of the world as well.
The impact of this has been that these hospitals, in the second year after our consultation, are double their output and then achieve financial recovery as well.
But there were no maps, no maps of roads, no maps showing hospitals, no way for help to reach the cyclone victims.
At Google, 40 volunteers used a new software to map 120,000 kilometers of roads, 3,000 hospitals, logistics and relief points.
I went to schools, I went to facilities, I went to
hospitals.
So, the patients print it out, because
hospitals
usually block us because they believe we are a social network.
The first bad news is that the chances of getting treatment are extremely slim to none, and that's because most of the blindness alleviation programs in the country are focused on adults, and there are very, very few
hospitals
that are actually equipped to treat children.
And this gas that is delivered in over a thousand critical care
hospitals
worldwide, now is approved, on label, and saves thousands of babies a year from certain death.
The president needs to stand up and say, at the end of a healthcare reform debate, "Our goal as a country is to move 50 percent of care out of institutions, clinics,
hospitals
and nursing homes, to the home, in 10 years."
We have long and frequent power outages, low penetration of computers, slow internet connections and a lot of patients visiting understaffed
hospitals.
Since the HIV epidemic,
hospitals
have been struggling to manage regular HIV treatment records for increasing volumes of patients.
When we started, we didn't find a reliable network to transmit data, especially from rural
hospitals.
With a team of engineers working within a hospital campus, we observed health care workers use the system and iteratively build an information system that is now managing HIV records in all major public
hospitals
in Malawi.
These are
hospitals
serving over 2,000 HIV patients, each clinic.
It is inspiring and fun to follow technology trends across the globe, but to make them work in low-resourced environments like public
hospitals
in sub-Saharan Africa, we have had to become jacks-of-all-trades and build whole systems, including the infrastructure, from the ground up.
So you get these empty village subcenters and crowded
hospitals.
And as it comes to shore and the wind blows, and little droplets of the water get into the air, the emergency rooms of all the
hospitals
fill up with people with acute respiratory distress.
We talked about the practical stuff, the stuff no one prepares you for: dealing with government agencies, hospitals, nursing homes, advanced care directives, funeral directors and extended family members, (Laughter) making decisions about coffins, headstones, headstone wording, headstone font size, all while sleep-deprived.
Is this headed here, where we can have distributed systems with the right infrastructure to provide power for our
hospitals
and our schools?
What if we redesign our health care system into one that does not reimburse practitioners for the actual procedures performed on a patient but rather reimburses doctors, hospitals, pharmaceutical and medical companies for every day a single individual is kept healthy and doesn't develop a disease?
It needs doctors, hospitals, insurers, pharmaceutical and medical companies to reframe their approach and, most important, it can't happen without the willingness and motivation of individuals to change their lifestyle in a sustained way, to prioritize staying healthy, in addition to opening up for sharing the health data on a constant basis.
And then rebellious military deserter Ryan Phillippe goes on a "Road Trip" with best friend's girlfriend, an artificial storyline manipulation to visit families of dead servicemen, maimed soldiers in military hospitals, etc. and finally to broach the issue of fleeing to Canada or Mexico.
(Moore was performing at children's
hospitals
as the Lone ranger for sick kids.)
The director knows absolutely nothing about hospitals, medications, science or anything of a technical nature.
There are huge skyscraper professional buildings and
hospitals.
Wow, well, you know those shock things they use in
hospitals
to get your heart pumping again?
If you liked Paddy Chayevsky's "Network" you'll probably like this black comedy as well, as it's another brilliant Chayevsky script, a wonderful satire on big-city
hospitals
and a perfect vehicle for Geo.
Nothing is sacred; hospitals, plastic surgery, Howard Hughes....
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