Medications
in sentence
182 examples of Medications in a sentence
We also have
medications
called nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
medications.
We don't quite understand, but there are some complex mechanisms why those
medications
just don't work for some women.
She wasn't on any
medications
which could produce hallucinations.
We're testing these kinds of simple sensor-network technologies in the home so that any phone that a senior is already comfortable with can help them deal with their
medications.
So what the Western countries, developed countries, have generously done is they have proposed to provide free drugs to all people in Third World countries who actually can't afford these
medications.
WL: Well, you know, there's abundant epidemiological evidence, and I think in the information age, it doesn't take long to go to a credible source like PubMed, the National Library of Medicine, to look for epidemiological studies for cancer risk reduction based on diet and based on common
medications.
So this was Prozac, this was Zoloft, this was a black jellybean and this was muscle relaxant, all of which were the
medications
that the impatient was taking.
The director knows absolutely nothing about hospitals, medications, science or anything of a technical nature.
Your psychiatrist needs to prescribe stronger
medications
for your problem.
I had to wonder what sort of
medications
were being abused by the scriptwriters, or perhaps they never mentally left the psychedelic sixties.
The director fails to create an atmosphere, despite heavy use of the same gimmicks (tired look of the main character, phone or door bell ringing all the time, water dripping and medications).
If you have insomnia and are wary about taking prescription medications, then this CLUNKER of film should do the trick!
Foreign NGOs such as MSF insist on using
medications
that are up to World Health Organization standards, but the Chinese government insists that such restrictive measures are excessive.
Safety regulations must, at a minimum, be applied to the prescription of the anti-retroviral
medications
that fight HIV, because such drugs are extremely sensitive to dosage changes and interactions with other medicines.
Finally, the required medical responses, including diagnostic tools and effective
medications
and vaccines, inevitably lag behind the emerging diseases.
And, to make matters worse, certain key TB drugs can have adverse interactions with standard oral diabetes medications, rendering them less effective.
Local healthcare clinics started bundling testing and treatment for the two diseases; and, as anti-viral
medications
have become available in Africa, the rate of TB infections in HIV patients has begun to fall.
Proper disinfection of equipment is generally affordable (especially in comparison to the cost of equipment itself), and contamination of
medications
and solutions can be avoided through training and vigilance.
Most vaccines and
medications
are currently too expensive for the majority of Africans.
Yet, in much of Africa, a lack of affordable medications, and a dearth of trained doctors and nurses, means that patients rarely receive the care they need.
These initiatives are in conjunction with other undertakings, such as a joint ACS-Clinton Health Access Initiative program to broaden access to cancer
medications.
Chronic pain is difficult to treat; even the most effective
medications
provide only modest relief to a minority of patients.
In 2012, my colleagues and I created PharmaChk, a portable device that doctors can use to detect fake or ineffective
medications
in hard-to-reach places.
For example, in several countries, stable patients who prefer to visit their health-care provider less often receive multi-month supplies of
medications.
Likewise, patients with well-controlled NCDs who show no symptoms and are doing well on
medications
may need only occasional visits to a health-care provider, while those with more complicated cases could benefit from closer medical monitoring and counseling.
Likewise, controlling TB and NCDs will require making
medications
more convenient and affordable.
The World Bank was also silent when its developing-country clients’ access to life-saving
medications
was being restricted.
Achieving the third 90% (suppression of the viral load) depends mainly on whether AVR-treated individuals take the
medications
on schedule.
That may require social support to encourage the patients to continue the
medications
even when they feel healthy, and to help ensure the timely and affordable supply of
medications.
The world urgently needs new drugs to replace the antibiotics, anti-malarial regimes, anti-retroviral AIDS and HIV medications, and tuberculosis treatments that are losing effectiveness.
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