Patients
in sentence
2016 examples of Patients in a sentence
My mother, a clinical psychotherapist, would occasionally see
patients
at home in the evening.
So I looked at how the
patients
were doing, and I looked at
patients
who just looked like everybody else, except they were pubertally delayed.
And since then, we have 160
patients.
But more than that, she has normal breast size, because by blocking testosterone, every one of our
patients
has normal breast size if they get to us at the appropriate age, not too late.
They've been fitted to nearly 1,000 patients, 400 of which have been wounded U.S. soldiers.
This bionic propulsion is very important clinically to
patients.
Next week I'm visiting the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and I'm going to try to convince CMS to grant appropriate code language and pricing, so this technology can be made available to the
patients
that need it.
In a recent trial we just wrapped up at the Media Lab, one of our patients, a U.S. veteran who has been an amputee for about 20 years and worn dozens of legs, said of one of our printed parts, "It's so soft, it's like walking on pillows, and it's effing sexy."
The virus would need to be isolated from infected patients, packaged up and then sent to a facility where scientists would inject the virus into chicken eggs, and incubate those chicken eggs for several weeks in order to prepare the virus for the start of a multistep, multimonth flu vaccine manufacturing process.
And that got doctors very excited, because doctors, they always want to know more information about their patients, particularly at home, and this is particularly true in chronic diseases, like pulmonary diseases, like COPD, or heart failure or Alzheimer's and even depression.
So I'm really excited because we have deployed the device with many
patients.
We have deployed the device with
patients
that have COPD, which is a pulmonary disease,
patients
that have Alzheimer's,
patients
that have depression and anxiety and people that have Parkinson's.
One of the
patients
with whom we deployed is actually my aunt.
And then something occurred to me: There has to be an easier way, because it's the
patients
who are the most in need of access to eye care who are the least likely to get it.
So for
patients
like Mama Wangari, who have been blind for over 10 years and never seen her grandchildren, for less than 40 dollars, we can restore her eyesight.
And I realized seeing the homeless through their eyes that almost all of them were psychiatric
patients
that had nowhere to go.
Thousands of
patients
every year lose their lives due to liver and oral cancer.
Our best way to help these
patients
is to perform early detection and diagnoses of these diseases.
In
patients
who, unfortunately, are suspected of these diseases, an expert physician first orders very expensive medical imaging technologies such as fluorescent imaging, CTs, MRIs, to be performed.
For our second goal, to reduce the use of expensive medical imaging technologies to screen patients, we started with a standard, white light photograph, acquired either from a DSLR camera or a mobile phone, for the patient.
Nearly all of my
patients
were smokers or ex-smokers, and most of them had started smoking when they were children or in their early teens.
And despite living in a beautiful, wealthy country, with access to the most sophisticated medicines, nearly every single one of my
patients
died.
At present, we have the entire global health sector doing everything it can to help the tidal wave of
patients
suffering as a result of tobacco.
So imagine that grave day, when her sassy supervisor invited her to this "change everything" meeting and told her that would have to ask each and every last one of her
patients
to self-identify.
Before the early 20th century, physicians often diagnosed emotional distress in their
patients
just by observation.
Today, however, we are not just giving these drugs to other animals as test subjects, but they're giving them these drugs as patients, both in ethical and much less ethical ways.
She’s well stocked with the essentials she needs to treat her
patients.
In spite of all her hard work, there will always be
patients
she can’t help, like the woman with the tumor.
In a few short weeks, the Nile’s annual flooding will begin, bringing life to the soil for the next year’s harvest and a whole new crop of
patients.
"Let's get your vital signs" — measure your blood pressure and your heart rate, but let's also ask something equally as vital to Veronica and a lot of
patients
like her in South Los Angeles.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Doctors
Health
About
Treatment
Which
Would
Other
Medical
There
Cancer
People
Could
Hospital
Disease
Drugs
After
Where
Often
Years