Medical
in sentence
2382 examples of Medical in a sentence
Big data is important, and big data is new, and when you think about it, the only way this planet is going to deal with its global challenges — to feed people, supply them with
medical
care, supply them with energy, electricity, and to make sure they're not burnt to a crisp because of global warming — is because of the effective use of data.
The problem: The
medical
literature only knew nine of them.
There is a little-known documented
medical
term called impending doom.
As a
medical
provider, I'm trained to respond to this symptom like any other, so when a patient having a heart attack looks at me and says, "I'm going to die today," we are trained to reevaluate the patient's condition.
As we talked further, it would turn out that she was a mother of two adopted children who were both on their way to
medical
school.
Because of her, two children had a chance they never would have had otherwise and would go on to save lives in the
medical
field as
medical
doctors.
I emailed scientists, and they broke through paywalls and sent me their
medical
journal and science journal articles directly.
It was like the formal
medical
system was canceling hope in favor of acceptance alone.
Havana's Latin American
Medical
School: It's the largest
medical
school in the world, graduating 23,000 young doctors since its first class of 2005, with nearly 10,000 more in the pipeline.
WHO Director Margaret Chan said, "For once, if you are poor, female, or from an indigenous population, you have a distinct advantage, an ethic that makes this
medical
school unique."
Even the brightest students from these poor communities weren't academically prepared for six years of
medical
training, so a bridging course was set up in sciences.
They spoke easily to each other in Spanish and listened to their patients in Creole thanks to Haitian
medical
students flown in from ELAM in Cuba.
Worst of all, in some countries,
medical
societies influence accreditation bodies not to honor the ELAM degree, fearful these grads will take their jobs or reduce their patient loads and income.
Two thousand years ago, Galen, one of the most prominent
medical
researchers of the ancient world, proposed that while we're awake, our brain's motive force, its juice, would flow out to all the other parts of the body, animating them but leaving the brain all dried up, and he thought that when we sleep, all this moisture that filled the rest of the body would come rushing back, rehydrating the brain and refreshing the mind.
We have 21st-century
medical
treatments and drugs to treat cancer, but we still have 20th-century procedures and processes for diagnosis, if any.
There was a paper published in the
medical
journal The Lancet in England a few years ago called " A man who pricked his finger and smelled putrid for 5 years."
And they later discovered that a lot of the worst
medical
problems came from the particles people breathed in.
More participation, more peer coordination, sometimes distorts outcomes and there are some things, like things, for example, in the
medical
profession that we want new power to get nowhere near.
It's now legal for
medical
purposes in almost half our 50 states, millions of people can purchase their marijuana, their medicine, in government- licensed dispensaries, and over half my fellow citizens now say it's time to legally regulate and tax marijuana more or less like alcohol.
Look at Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, England, where people who have been addicted to heroin for many years and repeatedly tried to quit and failed can get pharmaceutical heroin and helping services in
medical
clinics, and the results are in: Illegal drug abuse and disease and overdoses and crime and arrests all go down, health and well-being improve, taxpayers benefit, and many drug users even put their addictions behind them.
It's a global issue affecting both rich and poor countries, and at the heart of it, you might say, well, isn't this really just a
medical
issue?
They told me that I'm a traitor to my own profession, that I should be fired, have my
medical
license taken away, that I should go back to my own country.
Well, eventually I learned enough English, and my parents were so happy the day that I got into
medical
school and took my oath of healing and service.
As a
medical
student, I was taking care of this 19-year-old who was biking back to his dorm when he got struck and hit, run over by an SUV.
The more fear then spirals into mistrust and poor
medical
care.
So my two
medical
students, Suhavi Tucker and Laura Johns, literally took their research to the streets.
Participating doctors voluntarily disclose on a public website not just information about where we went to
medical
school and what specialty we're in, but also our conflicts of interest.
I received mail at my undisclosed home address with threats to contact the
medical
board to sanction me.
Research has shown us that openness also helps doctors, that having open
medical
records, being willing to talk about
medical
errors, will increase patient trust, improve health outcomes, and reduce malpractice.
Now, this problem is not only a huge problem for the military, but it's also a huge problem that's epidemic throughout the entire
medical
field, which is how do we actually look at wounds and how do we stop them quickly in a way that can work with the body?
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