Pharmaceutical
in sentence
484 examples of Pharmaceutical in a sentence
Many
pharmaceutical
companies offer deworming medicines for free, so the END Fund works with the right partners to coordinate their delivery.
Indeed in my studies I was a guinea pig for a
pharmaceutical
industry.
This one is a "third lung," a
pharmaceutical
device for long-term asthma treatment.
And none of it has any real
pharmaceutical
quality, it's only your belief that makes it real in your body and makes a stronger effect.
It was as if he was in the grip of some invisible pharmaceutical, a chemical reaction, for which my playing the music was its catalyst.
Because this idea that health is internal and atomized and individual and
pharmaceutical
is largely an error.
What if we redesign our health care system into one that does not reimburse practitioners for the actual procedures performed on a patient but rather reimburses doctors, hospitals,
pharmaceutical
and medical companies for every day a single individual is kept healthy and doesn't develop a disease?
It needs doctors, hospitals, insurers,
pharmaceutical
and medical companies to reframe their approach and, most important, it can't happen without the willingness and motivation of individuals to change their lifestyle in a sustained way, to prioritize staying healthy, in addition to opening up for sharing the health data on a constant basis.
So the great
pharmaceutical
company is using prisoners as lab rats.
Nathan is a Jewish New Yorker who tells Stingo that he is a research biologist for a
pharmaceutical
company.
The search leads him to world renowned virologist Dr. Ramsey Krago (Ron Perlman), who is secretly creating deadly viruses, releasing them, then "developing" an antidote (which he had created in tandem with the virus) and selling it to the highest paying
pharmaceutical
company.
The second story is based on a guy that gets his
pharmaceutical
prescription screwed up with another patent's.
He has arrived too late to warn the population of Homesville not to try the pill dropped in their mailbox by a respectable
pharmaceutical
company.
For the 39% of Playboy Magazine subscribers (e.g.--Janet Reno, Gore Vidal, Madeleine Albright) who pay monthly for the articles rather than the pictorials, this Playboy movie will be taken primarily as a cautionary tale about the corruption of the world
pharmaceutical
industry.
The main character Janie (the artificially enhanced Judy Thompson) works in a
pharmaceutical
lab.
Trying to link vinyl chloride monomer, the stuff that's reacted to form PVC, and allegedly poor manufacturing processes from 30 yrs ago to DES, a
pharmaceutical
that was created specifically to interact with and was prescribed to people was a bit of a stretch.
Foreign organizations, such as aid agencies or
pharmaceutical
companies, do have a role to play in boosting local innovation.
The AIDS crisis, for example, called forth tens of billions of dollars for research and development – and similarly substantial commitments by the
pharmaceutical
industry – to produce lifesaving antiretroviral drugs at global scale.
The third reason is bureaucratic capture: just as the principal aim of Bush’s Medicare Drug Benefit bill of 2003 was to boost
pharmaceutical
company profits, so the Bush administration’s Social Security proposal will most likely be tailored to the interests of Wall Street.
But once a
pharmaceutical
company develops a treatment for a psychiatric disorder, it acquires a financial interest in making sure that doctors diagnose the disorder as often as possible.
Most
pharmaceutical
companies, for example, lack effective innovation supply chains.
But only about 15% of the drugs that the US Food and Drug Administration has approved recently were developed by the same company that markets and sells them, meaning that many major
pharmaceutical
companies depend on the innovation ecosystem to advance their products.
US
pharmaceutical
companies, for example, want the UK’s cash-strapped National Health Service to pay more for drugs.
India and China, as major
pharmaceutical
exporters themselves, have a clear interest in seeing lower medicine tariffs worldwide.
Abolishing
pharmaceutical
tariffs would follow the example set by developed countries when they created the WTO two decades ago.
China, India, and the other BRICS should form a similar coalition to press for the elimination of
pharmaceutical
tariffs, thereby broadening access to health care throughout the developing world.
The
pharmaceutical
industry, fueled by our desire for quick fixes, has effectively deployed its considerable power to promulgate the notion of “disorders” and “illnesses” in all domains of our lives.
Health in Hard PlacesBASEL – When it comes to health care, all stakeholders – patients, service providers,
pharmaceutical
companies, and governments – know that something needs to change.
In the
pharmaceutical
sector – which is particularly vulnerable to IP infringement – a stronger IP regime could increase FDI inflows from $1.5 billion this year to $8.3 billion in 2020, with
pharmaceutical
R&D doubling to $1.3 billion over the same period.
The increased FDI would create 18,000 new jobs in the
pharmaceutical
industry.
Back
Next
Related words
Companies
Industry
Drugs
Their
Research
Which
Company
Would
Other
There
Countries
Firms
Governments
Global
Development
Products
Health
Developing
World
Market