Pneumonia
in sentence
135 examples of Pneumonia in a sentence
We stockpile them for emergencies on the understanding they'll reduce the number of complications, which means
pneumonia
and death.
He's got pneumonia, and he looks like he needs intensive care.
He's very, very thin, and he is, indeed, very sick with pneumonia, and he's too sick to talk to me, so I talk to his daughter Kathleen, and I say to her, "Did you and Jim ever talk about what you would want done if he ended up in this kind of situation?"
So many children today die of diarrhea, as you heard earlier, and
pneumonia.
You might have a lobar pneumonia, for example, and they could give you an antiserum, an injection of rabid antibodies to the bacterium streptococcus, if the intern sub-typed it correctly.
Depression, for example, is the third-leading cause of disability, alongside conditions such as diarrhea and
pneumonia
in children.
The idea is, when you're short of specialized health care professionals, use whoever is available in the community, train them to provide a range of health care interventions, and in these books I read inspiring examples, for example of how ordinary people had been trained to deliver babies, diagnose and treat early pneumonia, to great effect.
Complications is a medical euphemism for
pneumonia
and death.
Diarrhea and
pneumonia
are among the top two killers of children under five, and what we can do to prevent these diseases isn't some smart, new technological innovations.
Researchers are killing
pneumonia
in lungs by shining light deep inside of lungs.
A hundred years ago, we tended to die of infectious diseases like pneumonia, that, if they took hold, would take us away quite quickly.
You have a pneumonia, you take penicillin, you kill the microbe and you cure the disease.
Come down with pneumonia, and your mother will rush you to the nearest hospital for medical treatment.
We equipped her with modern medical technology, like this $1 malaria rapid test, and put it in a backpack full of medicines like this to treat infections like pneumonia, and crucially, a smartphone, to help her track and report on epidemics.
At a young age, her father died of pneumonia, leaving his wife and two daughters alone with all the heavy chores.
Why? Well there's only a few diseases that account for the vast majority of those deaths: diarrhea,
pneumonia
and malaria.
They looked at malaria, diarrheal disease, pneumonia, iron deficiency anemia, and looked at what the consequences could be in 2050.
Audience member: One of the things I've heard is that the real death cause when you get a flu is the associated pneumonia, and that a
pneumonia
vaccine may offer you 50 percent better chance of survival.
And along comes pneumococcus or another bacteria, streptococcus and boom, they get a bacterial
pneumonia.
And yes they die, drowning in their own fluids, of
pneumonia.
But it's not bacterial
pneumonia.
And it's not a
pneumonia
that would respond to a vaccine.
And pneumonia, often triggered by bacterial or viral infections, attacks the alveoli themselves.
But with new or better vaccines for malaria, TB, HIV, pneumonia, diarrhea, flu, we could end suffering that has been on the Earth since the beginning of time.
Think about it with the Corexit hitting the membranes, and it will clog up the gills, and then these animals are going to be getting something like what you call chemical pneumonia, trying to aspirate the compounds.
And what does happen with that eventually is
pneumonia
sets in and liver, kidney, brain damage.
At this point in her life, she's suffering with full-blown AIDS and had
pneumonia.
And then to create some action they decide to drop a rock on somebody's shoulder and for the rest of the movie he's coughing as if he was dying of a
pneumonia
or something...and then plays hero (cheesiest scene of all!!) to help the plan which is to do who knows what... its never a good sign when you find yourself laughing out loud in the middle of THE dramatic scene...in a nutshell; don't waste your time!
Death rates from hunger, diarrhea, and
pneumonia
are soaring.
For about $1 billion a year, vaccination programs could be expanded to prevent childhood
pneumonia
and diarrhea, saving another million lives annually.
Next
Related words
Diarrhea
Children
Diseases
Malaria
Which
Countries
Infections
Deaths
Against
Million
Death
Could
Childhood
Cause
Vaccine
Under
Example
Child
Years
Prevent