Medicines
in sentence
439 examples of Medicines in a sentence
In fact, about 80 percent of the active ingredients in
medicines
now come from offshore, particularly China and India, and we don't have a governance system.
If we remove half of the data, we can never know what the true effect size of these
medicines
is.
And so, I guess you'd say, dissatisfied with the performance and quality of these medicines, I went back to school, in chemistry, with the idea that perhaps by learning the trade of discovery chemistry and approaching it in the context of this brave new world of the open source, the crowd source, the collaborative network that we have access to within academia, that we might more quickly bring powerful and targeted therapies to our patients.
Hum? (Laughter) Next, there's another one, from the
medicines'
package leaflet, that says the following: "Warning!
These are the renting contracts, the package leaflet of the
medicines.
It's in our plants, in our medicines, in our lives, every single day.
Or for that matter, if you look at the genetic level, 60 percent of
medicines
were prospected, were found first as molecules in a rainforest or a reef.
They don't get treated, they don't get detected, they don't get the benefit of all the modern
medicines.
There are many reasons for these positive developments, but one of the most remarkable is in the increase in the number of people around the world on anti-retroviral therapy, the
medicines
they need to keep their HIV in check.
But beyond the staggering numbers, what's truly important from a global health point of view, what's truly worrying from a global health point of view, is that the vast majority of these affected individuals do not receive the care that we know can transform their lives, and remember, we do have robust evidence that a range of interventions, medicines, psychological interventions, and social interventions, can make a vast difference.
We cannot know the true effects of the
medicines
that we prescribe if we do not have access to all of the information.
He wrote a book over a thousand years ago called "The Canon of Medicine," and the rules he laid out for testing
medicines
are actually really similar to the rules we have today, that the disease and the medicine must be the same strength, the medicine needs to be pure, and in the end we need to test it in people.
We should deliver
medicines
to those who are ill.
Medicines
for the poor, food relief for those who are hungry, and peacekeepers for those who are facing civil war.
Sending somebody to school and giving them medicines, ladies and gentlemen, does not create wealth for them.
There were countries that did not recognize pharmaceutical product patents, such as India, and Indian pharmaceutical companies started to produce so-called generic versions, low-cost copies of antiretroviral medicines, and make them available in the developing world, and within a year the price had come down from 10,000 dollars per patient per year to 350 dollars per patient per year, and today that same triple pill cocktail is available for 60 dollars per patient per year, and of course that started to have an enormous effect on the number of people who could afford access to those
medicines.
This is what you see today, and this is in developing countries, so what that means is, unless we do something deliberate and unless we do something now, we will very soon be faced with another drug price crisis, because new drugs are developed, new drugs go to market, but these
medicines
are patented in a much wider range of countries.
And this is how it works: Patent holders, inventors that develop new
medicines
patent those inventions, but make those patents available to the
Medicines
Patent Pool.
Those manufacturers can then sell those
medicines
at much lower cost to people who need access to them, to treatment programs that need access to them.
Nelson is a member of the expert advisory group of the
Medicines
Patent Pool, and he told me not so long ago, "Ellen, we rely in Kenya and in many other countries on the
Medicines
Patent Pool to make sure that new
medicines
also become available to us, that new medicines, without delay, become available to us."
And ultimately, because you can do this for the individual, we could even see this moving to the point where the ability to develop and test
medicines
will be you on a chip, what we're trying to say here is the individualizing of the process of developing drugs and testing their safety.
They bring the
medicines
up from the pharmacy.
We don't know for, really, basically, any of the clinics in the developing world, which ones have
medicines
and which ones don't.
Every hospital in the world could use a DBC for printing personalized
medicines
for a patient at their bedside.
Scientists on Earth could then send the digital instructions to that DBC to make new
medicines
or to make synthetic organisms that produce oxygen, food, fuel or building materials, as a means for making the planet more habitable for humans.
But for now, I would be satisfied beaming new
medicines
across the globe, fully automated and on demand, saving lives from emerging infectious diseases and printing personalized cancer
medicines
for those who don't have time to wait.
And despite living in a beautiful, wealthy country, with access to the most sophisticated medicines, nearly every single one of my patients died.
We have some patent medicines, Canopic jars for your organs, communist soap that says, "This is your soap for the year."
Now, our preliminary labwork on the leaf extract has shown that precisely these leaves contain ingredients that are very close, in terms of structures, chemical structures, to those
medicines
which are sold in the chemist's shop against asthma.
But all is not rosy in learning from nature about new
medicines.
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