Treat
in sentence
1532 examples of Treat in a sentence
Patronizing, I
treat
everybody from another culture as if they were my servants.
Prices for ARVs, the drugs needed to
treat
HIV, cost about 12,000 [dollars] per patient per year.
The fourth explanation is captured in the title of a book called "The Expanding Circle," by the philosopher Peter Singer, who argues that evolution bequeathed humans with a sense of empathy, an ability to
treat
other peoples' interests as comparable to one's own.
These scans, the clinics say, can help prevent Alzheimer's disease, solve weight and addiction issues, overcome marital conflicts, and treat, of course, a variety of mental illnesses ranging from depression to anxiety to ADHD.
I am more excited than most people, as a neuroscientist, about the potential for neuroscience to
treat
mental illness and even maybe to make us better and smarter.
Lunch ladies
treat
me really well.
["What does equality mean to you?"] ["Marriage"] ["Freedom"] ["Civil rights"]
["Treat
every person as you'd
treat
yourself"] It's when you don't have to think about it, simple as that.
You put it in your search engine, and you create the drug to
treat
the threat.
But I want to tell you the story of PISA, OECD's test to measure the knowledge and skills of 15-year-olds around the world, and it's really a story of how international comparisons have globalized the field of education that we usually
treat
as an affair of domestic policy.
We
treat
biotechnology with the same scrutiny we apply to nuclear power plants.
And what that means is that every time you discuss the future, or any kind of a future event, grammatically you're forced to cleave that from the present and
treat
it as if it's something viscerally different.
This view is conditioned by the fact that many of the drugs that are prescribed to
treat
these disorders, like Prozac, act by globally changing brain chemistry, as if the brain were indeed a bag of chemical soup.
These drugs have so many side effects because using them to
treat
a complex psychiatric disorder is a bit like trying to change your engine oil by opening a can and pouring it all over the engine block.
So these results make me and my colleagues more convinced than ever that the brain is not a bag of chemical soup, and it's a mistake to try to
treat
complex psychiatric disorders just by changing the flavor of the soup.
And so if you hear an expert talking about the Internet and saying it can do this, or it does do this, or it will do that, you should
treat
it with the same skepticism that you might
treat
the comments of an economist about the economy or a weatherman about the weather, or something like that.
The bad news is, this drug doesn't actually
treat
all cases of cystic fibrosis, and it won't work for Danny, and we're still waiting for that next generation to help him.
In Mesoamerica, there used to be neurosurgery, and there were these neurosurgeons that used to
treat
patients.
So if you are possessed by an evil spirit causing neurologic or psychiatric problems, then the way to
treat
this is, of course, to make a hole in your skull and let the evil spirit escape.
Now, about a hundred thousand patients in the world have received deep brain stimulation, and I'm going to show you some examples of using deep brain stimulation to
treat
disorders of movement, disorders of mood and disorders of cognition.
So now we are in clinical trials, and are in Phase III clinical trials, and this may become a new procedure, if it's safe and we find that it's effective, to
treat
patients with severe depression.
I've shown you that we can use deep brain stimulation to
treat
the motor system in cases of Parkinson's disease and dystonia.
I've shown you that we can use it to
treat
a mood circuit in cases of depression.
We're going to do this in people that have cognitive deficits, and we've chosen to
treat
patients with Alzheimer's disease who have cognitive and memory deficits.
As I think Robert Neuwirth said, there isn't a bank or a corporation or a government or an NGO who's going to be able to do it if we
treat
citizens only as consumers.
Logically, then, if you want to
treat
insulin resistance, you get people to lose weight, right?
You
treat
the obesity.
Within the context of The New Yorker magazine ... "T-Cell Army: Can the body's immune response help
treat
cancer?"
There really is no telling what city could be defined by a certain scene or a certain song in the next decade, but as much as we absolutely cannot predict that, what we absolutely can predict is what happens when we
treat
music as necessary and we work to build a music city.
Heat, beat and
treat.
Is that a nice way to
treat
another human being, try and make them think something they don't want to think?
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