Science cures diseases and improves quality of life.
Not exact matches
Not to mention that advances in
science and technology are ushering in a new era of medical research that will likely
cure many
diseases in the coming decade or two.
«We got involved in biotech in the late 90's when two of our children were diagnosed with a rare genetic
disease... at the time there was nothing,» said Crowley «So we really focused as parents initially on what could we do to help drive
science to a
cure.
how about if
science hadn't sought
cures for most of the
disease in this world because «GOD CAN DO IT»?
So, not a bad choice, but one might also pick one of the many
cures to
diseases that medical
science has found in the face of religious opposition to medical
science, religious propagation of erroneous information in the Christian bible about
disease propagation, and many other
science errors in the Christian bible.
We have seen it to be a genuine religion, and no mere silly appeal to imagination to
cure disease; we have seen its method of experimental verification to be not unlike the method of all
science; and now here we find mind -
cure as the champion of a perfectly definite conception of the metaphysical structure of the world.
When
science does finally find the
cure for a
disease, will we give god the credit?
Let us suppose that two men have an eye
disease, and one of them submits to the
cure and takes whatever medical
science advises, even if it is disagreeable, while the other not only does not accept any advice from the doctor, but also lives intemperately.
Science — I relieve pain and
cure disease, I extend lives, allow travel, communication, and people to understand and control their environment.
If we were to draw two lists, those of the ailments God will
cure and those he will not, it would coincide perfectly with those
diseases medical
science or the human body itself can
cure and those it can not.
Science has done an incredible job in explaining our natural world, advancing technology and
curing physical
diseases.
* Food Is Your Best Medicine by Henry Bieler * The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America's Favorite Health Food by Kaala Daniel * Know Your Fats: The Complete Primer for Understanding the Nutrition of Fats, Oils and Cholesterol by Mary Enig, PhD * Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats by Sally Fallon and Mary Enig, PhD * Eat Fat, Lose Fat: The Healthy Alternative to Trans Fats by Sally Fallon and Mary Enig, PhD * The Body Ecology Diet: Recovering Your Health and Rebuilding Your Immunity by Donna Gates * Nutrition and Physical Degeneration by Weston Price * Real Food: What to Eat and Why by Nina Planck * Full Moon Feast: Food and the Hunger for Connection by Jessica Prentice * The Diet
Cure by Julia Ross * The Cholesterol Myths: Exposing the Fallacy That Saturated Fat and Cholesterol Cause Heart
Disease by Uffe Ravnskov * Traditional Foods Are Your Best Medicine: Improving Health and Longevity with Native Nutrition by Ron Schmid, ND * The Untold Story of Milk, Revised and Updated: The History, Politics and
Science of Nature's Perfect Food: Raw Milk from Pasture - Fed Cows by Ron Schmid, ND * The Schwarzbein Principle: The Truth About Losing Weight, Being Healthy, and Feeling Younger by Diana Schwarzbein, MD
Using the new
science of optogenetics, scientists can activate or shut down neural pathways, altering behavior and heralding a true
cure for psychiatric
disease.
Science has not yet fully understood the causes of Alzheimer's
disease, either (and certainly has found no
cure); the logical conclusion is not that man just decided to get Alzheimer's
disease.
It allows for some blue - sky discussion about the merits of a life spent in
science that benefits the small farmer in Africa or a career directed toward a
cure for a
disease.
Future advancements in medical
science will continue to improve our ability to diagnose and treat the symptoms of mismatch
diseases but will not devise many actual
cures.
Once stem cells can be grown and differentiated in a controlled way to replace degenerated cells and repair tissues, medical
science may then be able to diagnose and
cure many intractable
diseases at their earliest stages, such as type 1 diabetes, Parkinson's
disease, various cardiovascular
diseases, liver
disease, and cancer.
There's nothing more important than engaging the brightest young minds in
science to
cure disease, work on climate change, and find new energy sources.»
However, many industry insiders say these changes are opening up unique opportunities for researchers who focus on translating basic
science into real - world
cures and are eager to explore the molecular mechanisms of
disease, test hypotheses, and do work that benefits patients.
Because of the advances in
science surrounding the
disease, you have a lot more options these days both in how you want to manage that and potentially maybe even
cure that some day.
«Too often in our culture we seem to believe that
science and technology are important, but it's for those weird, special people that are willing to dedicate themselves like monks, going off into a laboratory to
cure our
diseases and solve our problems.»
It's my guess that, as a young person, you imagined yourself using your abilities in math or
science to solve a problem — perhaps to
cure a
disease or advance the state of knowledge in an area that interested you.
«If we could predict the final 3D structures of proteins from their genetic sequence, we would be one step closer to understanding the cell on a molecular level and
curing disease,» says co-author Gevorg Grigoryan, an assistant professor of computer
science at Dartmouth.
As a new generation of gene therapy clinical trials shows promise to
cure or halt the progression of several rare
diseases, the time has come to explore ways to pay for the cutting edge treatments, a pediatric hematologist - oncologist from Dana - Farber / Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center argues in a commentary published by the journal
Science.
As the centerpiece of the medical innovation ecosystem, NIH not only supports the research that leads to treatments and
cures for our most devastating
diseases, but drives the life
sciences economic engine, annually sustaining over 400,000 jobs and nearly $ 60 billion in economic activity nationwide.
There is a lot of excitement about intelligent therapeutics, where chemistry interfaces with biological systems to
cure disease; a view based on computer
science could play a role.
It helps for
science news to have dramatic relevance to human affairs: Is there strong new hope for
curing a
disease, transforming the economy, building a better mousetrap?
«This is also a good example of how the basic
science being performed here at Gladstone provides a solid foundation with which to prevent, treat and ultimately
cure some of the world's most devastating
diseases.»
As a firm believer that stem cell
science will
cure Sickle Cell
Disease, she has dedicated a large portion of her life to improving the lives and overall healthcare of those living with the d
Disease, she has dedicated a large portion of her life to improving the lives and overall healthcare of those living with the
diseasedisease.
I think a lot of people were led to believe — and to what extent scientists were responsible for this is an interesting question — that if only the regulations were relaxed, embryonic stem - cell
science would be central to our medical research and practice going into the future, and that it would massively alleviate suffering and produce
cures for dreaded
diseases.
Our goal is to serve as a convener, facilitator, and accelerator for global
science and business leaders working together to develop innovative approaches that alleviate suffering, improve quality of life, and
cure diseases previously thought incurable.
This year's Action Award honorees include global leaders in the fight to end cancer as we know it; a world leader in advancing the emerging field of regenerative medicine and game - changing cell therapy medical treatments; the president of a non-profit group focused on developing
cures for chronic, debilitating and fatal
diseases; a sickle cell and stem cell advocate and founder /
science administrator of the Axis Advocacy; and the founding director of the Institute for Integrated Cell - Material Sciences (iCeMS) at Japan's Kyoto University.
Basic
science is always going to be good for medical applications, because for
curing any brain
disease it will be very helpful to understand how the normal brain functions.
This is the first clinical trial of its kind and The Human Trial is the first film to take us backstage into the world of
cure research: the formidable obstacles and grinding effort, the complexity of the
disease and the
science, what it takes to harvest cells, regulatory rules and the $ 5 billion plus it typically takes to bring a drug to market.
Deepak Srivastava, MD - President, Gladstone Institutes Steve Finkbeiner, MD, PhD - Director, Center of Systems and Therapeutics Warner C. Greene, MD, PhD - Director, Center for HIV
Cure Research Lennart Mucke, MD - Director, Gladstone Institute of Neurological
Disease Katherine S. Pollard, PhD - Director, Gladstone Institute of Data
Science and Biotechnology
Our broad expertise in life
sciences drives our commitment to help researchers understand life at a molecular level and develop innovations to prevent, diagnose, treat and
cure disease.
«RBC's generosity is a great example of business, medicine and
science joining forces to help ensure continued support for the innovative medical research that offer hope for new treatments and
cures for children with complex
diseases.»
The research might be
science's best shot at finding the elusive
cure for Alzheimer's
disease.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University]-- A new $ 100 million gift to Brown University's brain
science institute from alumnus Robert J. Carney and Nancy D. Carney will drive an ambitious agenda to quicken the pace of scientific discovery and help find
cures to some of the world's most persistent and devastating
diseases, such as ALS and Alzheimer's.
That's cool
science, but nobody really cares about
curing Huntington's
disease in a mouse, or a fruit fly or a worm.
In this exclusive interview, Adrienne Bell - Cors Shapiro, Axis Advocacy, discusses how she believes stem cell
science is the key to
curing sickle cell
disease.
Genome editing is a much - discussed frontier in medical
science at the moment, with «DNA surgery» having the potential to treat or
cure genetic
diseases like Huntington's.
This effort drives ground - breaking
science through collaboration and innovation by bringing together scientific fields, ideas, and technologies to fuel creativity, create new approaches, and advance progress toward
cures for devastating
diseases.
Brain donation makes it possible to advance
science and work toward
cures for neurological
diseases.
It was funded by the Consortium for Frontotemporal Dementia Research, Bluefield Project to
Cure FTD, National Institutes of Health, UCSF Resource Allocation Program, UCSF Alzheimer's
Disease Research Center, Chartrand Foundation and Clinical &
Science Translational Institute, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Alzheimer's Association, Welch Foundation, and Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation.
But the type of
science that instead aims to fill gaps in our understanding of the world — known as «basic» or «foundational» research — doesn't focus on specific applications, like a
disease cure or a drought - resistant crop, so no one can predict the real - world impact of any individual line of inquiry.
They are only for mindless amusement, and have much too much emphasis on who is the star researcher of the day, what horrible
disease might be
cured, and how
science could solve some new global calamity.
With ruthless precision, Dr. Offit unpacks the
science (or apparent lack thereof) behind the supplement industry, the vitamin craze, chiropractors, the risks of vaccines (apparently none), the treatment of Chronic Lyme (a
disease he says doesn't exist), the madness of alternative cancer
cures (which don't work), and the tragedy of treatments aimed at desperate parents whose kids are autistic (which also don't work).
Medical
science has not yet discovered a cause or
cure for Crohn's
disease, but many drugs are available to control symptoms.
Meanwhile,
science, progressing for a half a century along a parallel track, had handed the Baxleys a resolution — not a
cure, but a blood test that would reveal who had the gene for the
disease and who did not.