Treatment
in sentence
2329 examples of Treatment in a sentence
Indeed, advocates of the increasingly popular idea of a regulated market in organs claim that it is the ultimate
treatment.
And patients suffering a few months of agony at the end of life are often not well positioned to demand better
treatment.
Places like the United Kingdom actively court wealthy foreign nationals through extraordinary preferential
treatment
of their investment income.
Rather than a pardon, he wants parliament to pass a law allowing Tymoshenko to go to Germany for treatment, but on the condition that she would resume her prison sentence should she return to Ukraine.
Before the wounds had fully healed, the
treatment
was terminated.
Several countries are pursuing policies that emphasize prevention and
treatment
rather than repression – and refocusing their repressive measures on fighting the real enemy: organized crime.
Portugal and Switzerland are compelling examples of the positive impact of policies centered on prevention, treatment, and harm reduction.
Instead of leading to an explosion of drug consumption, as many feared, the number of people seeking
treatment
increased and overall drug use fell.
When the policy approach shifts from criminal repression to public health, drug users are more open to seeking
treatment.
A similar compromise could also be reached for the eurozone’s financial framework, and in particular the
treatment
of sovereign risk on banks’ balance sheets.
Without treatment, these experiences recur relentlessly.
These results, although preliminary, suggest an alternative
treatment
if validated in larger-scale studies.
Although fewer people in developing countries live to the age at which cancer is most prevalent, inadequate nutrition and environmental exposures to viruses and toxins, combined with a paucity of diagnostic and
treatment
options, increase cancer’s incidence and lethality.
The diagnosis and
treatment
of most types of cancer in developing countries would require a huge and daunting investment in infrastructure.
Although the use of big-ticket equipment, expensive chemotherapy drugs, and sophisticated and complex procedures such as bone marrow transplantation would not be wise, this is not to say that we should give up entirely on cancer
treatment
in developing countries.
Sometimes, prevention, diagnosis, and
treatment
are cost-effective.
Would food aid help to ensure the survival of a state whose
treatment
of its own citizens is among the most abysmal in the world?
Lower-profile rivals and enemies have suffered harsher
treatment.
Compare this with antibiotic
treatment
of, say, a urogenital infection, which lasts a few weeks at most.
As a result, compliance with TB drug
treatment
is particularly weak, paving the way for the emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB, which can no longer be treated by conventional therapeutic regimes.
While treating MDR-TB remains possible, doing so is arduous, with a
treatment
time of roughly two years, using drugs that are neither as efficient nor as benign as canonical drugs – and at a cost that rises by a factor of 10-100.
While this additional cost can be borne by health-care systems in the rich world, it is excessive for poor countries, implying no, or insufficient,
treatment.
Indeed, surgical resection of affected lungs has become the
treatment
of choice in many XDR-TB hotspots.
The new GeneXpert test diagnoses not only TB, but also, in the same step, MDR-TB, which means that it can rapidly direct adequate
treatment
and prevent infection of contacts – a true breakthrough.
A number of other drugs – some new and some repurposed – are currently in the last stage of clinical trials, and one new drug has been approved by US regulators for
treatment
of MDR-TB even before such trials have been completed.
And, when cancer
treatment
is needed, its toxic punch hits cancer cells selectively, with far fewer damaging side effects.
In their view, Britain’s sovereign received the
treatment
a second-rate power merits.
All of this is in sharp contrast with the
treatment
given the EU candidates.
The mother agreed, and when she returned six hours later, she threw enough money on the table to cover all of Mariama’s care: a blood transfusion and
treatment
for malaria and worm infestation.
The plan demands the restoration of health-care services in 40 hospitals and 1,300 primary health-care facilities across the country, so that children and mothers can receive free essential care, vaccinations, and
treatment
for diseases like tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and malaria.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
People
Which
Would
There
Patients
Could
Countries
About
Cancer
Health
Other
Medical
Should
Prevention
Disease
Years
Effective
After
Access