Treatments
in sentence
516 examples of Treatments in a sentence
But that's not even all of it, because once a drug is approved, tissue engineering techniques can actually help us develop more personalized
treatments.
This is an example from Karen Burg's lab, where they're using inkjet technologies to print breast cancer cells and study its progressions and
treatments.
In addition, they should be able to consider the possibility of introducing and maintaining effective
treatments
in the wider community once the trial ends.
What we need to do is to use our ingenuity and our scientific knowledge to try to design a new generation of
treatments
that are targeted to specific neurons and specific regions of the brain that are affected in particular psychiatric disorders.
It's exciting to see that in terms of what we've learned, but how many of those 4,000 diseases now have
treatments
available?
Could we, in fact, encourage all the companies that are out there that have drugs in their freezers that are known to be safe in humans but have never actually succeeded in terms of being effective for the
treatments
they were tried for?
And we decided to take on depression, and the reason we took on depression is because it's so prevalent, and as you know, there are many
treatments
for depression, with medication and psychotherapy, even electroconvulsive therapy, but there are millions of people, and there are still 10 or 20 percent of patients with depression that do not respond, and it is these patients that we want to help.
Managing the stress that leads to hyperarousal is one of our best-understood
treatments
for insomnia, and good sleep practices can help rebuild your relationship with bedtime.
This time, there's new
treatments
on the horizon.
But now, with the functionality that we get in these chips, we can begin to look for potential new
treatments.
It's really debilitating, and there aren't really many good
treatments
for it.
He relapsed a little bit, they gave him a series of treatments, and he was essentially cured.
So 100 years ago, hormones had just been discovered, and people hoped that hormone
treatments
were going to cure aging and disease, and now instead we set our hopes on stem cells, genetic engineering, and nanotechnology.
I want to say that the
treatments
we have for depression are appalling.
I hope that 50 years hence, people will hear about my
treatments
and be appalled that anyone endured such primitive science.
So I became much more tolerant of the vast world of alternative
treatments.
And yet, when I went to look at alternative treatments, I also gained perspective on other
treatments.
Now at the other end of alternative treatments, let me tell you about Frank Russakoff.
And I remember being amazed at that point to think that someone who clearly had so many bad experiences with so many different
treatments
still had buried in him, somewhere, enough optimism to reach out for one more.
A landmark study that was published two years ago asked the very important question: What are the most effective
treatments
for heart disease in women?
And these studies could not contribute one iota to the very, very important question, what are the most effective
treatments
for heart disease in women?
So the question we really need to ask ourselves is, why, given the devastating impact of these diseases to the individual, never mind the scale of the societal problem, why are there no effective
treatments?
So the question is, why, if we've known that for some time, as we have, why do we not have those
treatments?
And yet, despite how commonplace these disorders are, our current treatments, if they work at all, only suppress symptoms.
We have 21st-century medical
treatments
and drugs to treat cancer, but we still have 20th-century procedures and processes for diagnosis, if any.
Frank, a 59-year-old hardware store owner, doesn't even like going to the doctor and wants to find someone who believes in prevention first, but who is comfortable with alternative
treatments.
Now most of the time, I was working at UCLA Medical Center with physicians, discussing symptoms and diagnoses and
treatments
for my human patients, but some of the time, I was working at the Los Angeles Zoo with veterinarians, discussing symptoms and diagnoses and
treatments
for their animal patients.
This has not been the case with these treatments, and FDA regulations say that for a drug to be deemed effective, a large portion of the target population should see clinically significant improvement.
So we have not had that at all with these so-called
treatments.
The medical field has a long history of conceptualizing women's reproductive processes as illnesses that require treatment, and this has come at many costs, including excessive Cesarean deliveries, hysterectomies and prescribed hormone
treatments
that have harmed rather than enhanced women's health.
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