Sentences with phrase «diagnosable diseases»

An example of what this means in health care is to have nurse practitioners in retail health clinics treat patients that have precisely diagnosable diseases with rules - based treatments instead of having pricey doctors in expensive hospitals treat them.
Fueling the Future with «Free - from» Foods She and Simple Mills CEO and Founder Katlin Smith agree that the market for free - from foods has expanded far beyond those who have a diagnosable disease that requires the avoidance of specific foods and now includes many consumers who are experimenting with their diets to see what foods are most effective in helping them fuel their daily activities.
In this clinical setting without diagnosable disease, the diagnosis of a relative age - related adult - onset hypogonadism is gaining popularity and treatment with testosterone is becoming more common in the integrative medicine and urology fields.
If these imbalances are not addressed, the individual eventually progresses into a state of diagnosable disease.
Mainstream medicine has little to offer people who are not well, yet who don't suffer from any diagnosable disease.
Attributing what's a diagnosable disease that can benefit from treatment to an inherent character or personality flaw in your spouse can get in the way of the healing and recovery process.

Not exact matches

And according to the American Autoimmune - Related Diseases Association, 50 million Americans have a diagnosable autoimmune disease.
This means approximately fifteen million Americans have an easily diagnosable and correctable disorder that affects weight, energy, and the risk for many other diseases.
Unfortunately, while your symptoms may not be anything more than needing exercise or more sleep, or a normal experiencing post-partum or during menopause, they may point to a diagnosable and treatable condition like thyroid disease.
«Colony Collapse Disorder has been vastly overshadowed by diseases, recognizable parasites and diagnosable physiological problems.»
Avoidable death rates among the Maori, for example, are estimated to be almost double those of Europeans or other New Zealanders.3 Many indigenous people have one or more of a complex set of interlocking chronic diseases from a comparatively early age.9 Although these diseases are diagnosable and treatable, at least some of this avoidable mortality remains underdiagnosed and undertreated.
Not only can symptoms be distressing, AUD can trigger a cascade of lifelong adverse outcomes, such as: other mental disorders, suicide, serious unintentional injury, illicit drug use, antisocial behaviour, as well as early onset of heart disease, stroke and cancer.3 While the peak age for the onset for AUD is 18 — 24 years, the factors that predict the transition from alcohol use to AUD symptom onset and from symptom onset to diagnosable AUD remain largely unknown.
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