Medicine
in sentence
1185 examples of Medicine in a sentence
And one of the grand challenges right now in modern molecular
medicine
is to work out whether this variation makes you more susceptible to diseases, or does this variation just make you different?
The shocking part about it is that to avoid being infected with trachoma, all you have to do is wash your face: no medicine, no pills, no injections.
The good news, again, is that a lot of the things they need we already have, and we are very good at giving: economic assistance, not just money, but expertise, technology, knowhow, private investment, fair terms of trade, medicine, education, technical support for training for their police forces to become more effective, for their anti-terror forces to become more efficient.
This is the landscape of one
medicine.
So, before I became a dermatologist, I started in general medicine, as most dermatologists do in Britain.
Now these three guys up here, Furchgott, Ignarro and Murad, won the Nobel Prize for
medicine
back in 1998.
Well, ultimately, it could mean that you could print your own
medicine.
But perhaps for me the core bit going into the future is this idea of taking your own stem cells, with your genes and your environment, and you print your own personal
medicine.
We live in an incredible age of modern
medicine.
Soon, genetic breakthroughs and even better
medicine
are going to allow us to think of 100 as a normal lifespan.
It marks
medicine'
s first real triumph over physical pain, and every molecule has a story, and they are all published.
So let's not forget the role of the blacksmith in this picture, because without the blacksmith, things would look a little different ... (Laughter) But this science is bigger than
medicine.
Dan won his prize in
medicine
for demonstrating that high-priced fake
medicine
works better than low-priced fake
medicine.
The good-news stories in
medicine
are early detection, early intervention.
Perhaps more surprisingly, the same type of theory applies to biology and medicine, parturition, the act of giving birth, epileptic seizures.
Today's current "modern
" medicine
is a 60-year-old technique.
We've been harvesting propolis out of bee colonies for human medicine, but we didn't know how good it was for the bees.
Already in medicine, biofabrication techniques have been used to grow sophisticated body parts, like ears, windpipes, skin, blood vessels and bone, that have been successfully implanted into patients.
And beyond medicine, biofabrication can be a humane, sustainable and scalable new industry.
In reality, the relationship between the living and the dead has its own drama in the U.S. healthcare system, where decisions about how long to stretch the thread of life are made based on our emotional and social ties with the people around us, not just on
medicine'
s ability to prolong life.
If you travel to Mogadishu, Mexico City or Mumbai, you find that dilapidated infrastructure and logistics continue to be a stumbling block to the delivery of
medicine
and healthcare in the rural areas.
And what I want to show you is that in regenerative medicine, we've really shifted away from that idea of taking a bioinert material.
Yet Ira Byock, the director of palliative
medicine
at Dartmouth said, "You know, the best doctor in the world has never succeeded in making anyone immortal."
So the pharmaceutical industry, which I am personally very interested in because I've actually had the fortune to study it in quite some depth, is wonderful to be asking this question about the revolutionary versus non-revolutionary bits, because each and every
medicine
can actually be divided up on whether it really is revolutionary or incremental.
I am a neuroscientist with a mixed background in physics and
medicine.
I believe measuring value in healthcare will bring about a revolution, and I'm convinced that the founder of modern medicine, the Greek Hippocrates, who always put the patient at the center, he would smile in his grave.
We cannot get
medicine
to them reliably, they cannot get critical supplies, and they cannot get their goods to market in order to create a sustainable income.
Older people usually are the leaders of traditional societies, and the people most knowledgeable about politics, medicine, religion, songs and dances.
Personalized
medicine.
When
medicine
became somewhat scientific, in about 450 BC, with Hippocrates and those boys, they tried to look for herbs, plants that would literally shake the bad spirits out.
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