- All drugs are chemical products
- The majority of tests in medicine are chemical analytical methods
- The physiology is based mainly on chemistry
They should have taken inorganic, organic, and biochemistry.
Practisioner in applied chemistry
Practisioner in applied chemistry
For calculating specific amounts of medicine given to the patient. Doctors can pretty much double major in chemistry because of all they need to know on chemistry in general.
They must know chemistry and biology in order to be successeful.
The main factor is the interpretation of laboratory results.
helps by finding cures to many cancers and diseases
How do you educate doctors without chemistry? How do you educate researchers in plastics industries, or petroleum, or metallurgy, or ... etc. Added: As someone who has taken three years of undergraduate chemistry ( though much is forgotten! ) I can tell you that chemistry is education; the subject teaches you how to think, not what to think.
In Great Britain a chemist is another name for a pharmacist. And a pharmacist is someone who provides drugs (legally). I'm sure that you can see the benefit of drugs to patients. Else where a chemist is merely somebody who works with chemicals. Such people are those responsible for manufacturing, researching and being clever about inventing new drugs.
Any material benefit resulted; this discovery was a big success of chemistry and patience.
no, it's relevant in many situations. Doctors can't even become doctors without chemistry, it's also very important to make medicines. Chemistry is very important (also chemistry just rocks in general) :)
They must know chemistry and biology in order to be successful. Science and math are key to being a good doctor.