Treat
in sentence
1532 examples of Treat in a sentence
That's why cancer is such a difficult disease to
treat.
We learned that to
treat
Ebola successfully, we had to suspend some of the normal rules of society.
The police agreed, and we were able to
treat
the VIP Boys, and they did not have to worry about being arrested while in the unit.
It's straightforward: take a bunch of people, split them in half,
treat
one group one way, the other group, the other way.
Look, listen, probe, ask some hard questions, get out of that very comfortable mode of knowing, walk into curiosity mode, ask more questions, have a little dignity,
treat
the person you're talking to with rapport.
And as we
treat
it with our compound, this addiction to sugar, this rapid growth, faded.
You're going to
treat
us like dogs?
So this idea of harnessing focused ultrasound to
treat
lesions in the brain is not new at all.
The problems that we face is that the current method used to prevent and
treat
those dreadful diseases, such as genetic control, exploiting natural sources of resistance, crop rotation or seed treatment, among others, are still limited or ephemeral.
How did they
treat
my parents?
Chemotherapy, one of the most effective ways used to
treat
cancer today, involves giving patients really high doses of chemicals to try and kill off cancer cells.
In fact, it means that if a patient comes in and they're resistant to this drug, then if we give them a chemical to block this protein, then we can
treat
them again with the same drug.
Because I realized that if we could find a way to target remediation, we could also find a way to
treat
asthmatic patients more effectively.
For some reason, we have decided that abstinence is the best way to
treat
this.
It irks me ... when I hear people
treat
the humanities as a lesser path, as the easier path.
We've taken this title of "leader" and
treat
it as something that one day we're going to deserve.
Ultimately, you judge the character of a society, not by how they
treat
their rich and the powerful and the privileged, but by how they
treat
the poor, the condemned, the incarcerated.
And what I want to lay out for you today is a different way of thinking about how to
treat
debilitating disease, why it's important, why without it perhaps our health care system will melt down if you think it already hasn't, and where we are clinically today, and where we might go tomorrow, and what some of the hurdles are.
If the average age of your population is 30, then the average kind of disease that you have to
treat
is maybe a broken ankle every now and again, maybe a little bit of asthma.
How can you actually afford to
treat
patients when the reality of getting old looks like this?
There are very few things, very few things that you can really do that will change the way that you can
treat
these kinds of diseases and experience what I would call healthy aging.
One thing you can do is not
treat.
We diagnose the disease eventually, once it becomes symptomatic, and then we
treat
the symptom for 10, 20, 30, 40 years.
So today's reality is that if we get sick, the message is we will
treat
your symptoms, and you need to adjust to a new way of life.
I talked before about the use of devices to dramatically change the way we
treat
disease.
We have a very abiding and heartbreaking partnership with our colleagues at the Institute for Surgical Research in the US Army, who have to
treat
the now 11,000 kids that have come back from Iraq.
And if there's anything that's been learned about burn, it's that we don't know how to
treat
it.
A number of governments, and a number of regions, have recognized that this is a new way to
treat
disease.
That was a gorgeous
treat
for us.
I think it's because there's an imbalance, an asymmetry in the way we
treat
creative, emotionally driven psychological ideas versus the way we
treat
rational, numerical, spreadsheet-driven ideas.
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