เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

prolongation of life การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Of greatest importance to patients, the team found, is avoiding pointless prolongation of life.
  • Bacon's writings integrated morality, salvation, alchemy, and the prolongation of life.
  • As medical technology promised ever-lengthier prolongation of life at ever-higher costs, his stand seemed sane, even humane.
  • Had a timely diagnosis been made, it was argued by the plaintiff, survival or prolongation of life would have been possible.
  • The clinical condition of the child is so serious that quality-of-life considerations should take precedence over a prolongation of life.
  • That leaves health, which the media prefer to hype with false hope : They find it easy to promise remarkable breakthroughs, cures and prolongations of life.
  • He also wrote a long treatise on Medicine, " History of Life and Death ", with natural and experimental observations for the prolongation of life.
  • The goals of treatment for people with chronic heart failure are the prolongation of life, the prevention of acute decompensation and the reduction of symptoms, allowing for greater activity.
  • "We would like for this forest to represent the prolongation of life, " said Victoria Garcia, a director of the Center for Appropriate Technology, the environmental group supervising the planting.
  • He wrote " The Prolongation of Life : Optimistic Studies ", in which he espoused the potential life-lengthening properties of lactic acid bacteria ( " Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp . bulgaricus " ).
  • In 1904 he founded the Oliver-Sharpey lectureship " to promote physiological research by observation and experiment, and to encourage the application of physiological knowledge to the prevention and cure of disease and the prolongation of life"
  • "While extremely provocative, it remains to be shown that this will translate into resistance to opportunistic infections or prolongation of life, " said Dr . William Paul, head of U . S . federal AIDS research.
  • The physician had to be able to offer advice to the healthy as well as to the sick about how to live according to nature, for being in harmony with nature would result in the preservation of health as well as the prolongation of life.
  • Three days later, a doctor in charge told family members that " the brain was dead and treatment for the prolongation of life is nonsense, " and a family member agreed to removal of the kidneys after the heart stopped beating, she added.
  • Yogurt was introduced to the United States in the first decade of the twentieth century, influenced by 蒷ie Metchnikoff's " The Prolongation of Life; Optimistic Studies " ( 1908 ); it was available in tablet form for those with digestive intolerance and for home culturing.
  • "When inevitable death is imminent . . . it is permitted in conscience to take the decision to refuse forms of treatment that would only secure a precarious and burdensome prolongation of life, so long as the normal care due to a sick person in similar cases is not interrupted ."
  • "When we know, in effect, what our cells know, health care will be revolutionized, giving birth to regenerative medicine _ ultimately including the prolongation of life by regenerating our aging bodies with younger cells, " said Dr . William Haseltine, chief executive of Human Genome Sciences.
  • Watch Tower publications warned that accepting a blood transfusion could prevent Witnesses from living eternally in God's new world, the hope held by members : " It may result in the immediate and very temporary prolongation of life, but that at the cost of eternal life for a dedicated Christian ."
  • In such situations, when death is clearly imminent and inevitable, one can in conscience " refuse forms of treatment that would only secure a precarious and burdensome prolongation of life, so long as the normal care due to the sick person in similar cases is not interrupted . " ( Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Declaration on Euthanasia ).
  • ตัวอย่างการใช้เพิ่มเติม:   1  2