Most people have some sort of religious affiliation, and this faith shapes their worldviews and ethical ideals. Therefore, each person brings their religion into their debates on health medicines and science. It has to do more with the human aspect than with the science aspect.
European Medicines Agency's motto is 'Science. Medicines. Health.'.
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The major health concepts of Italy are the same as in the rest of the developed world.
Alright... so what would the doctors do if there were no medicines??? The pharmacists are the backbone for the health sciences... No Pharmacist, no medicines...
Phytotherapy is the study of the use of extracts of natural origin as medicines or health-promoting agents. Phytotherapy medicines differ from plant-derived medicines in standard pharmacology.
nothing.
Yes. Togethe Health is a discount program from several different drug companies to give low income families access to certain medicines. It is not health insurance. It only offers you a discount on the medicines included in the program. You have to meet the program's guidelines on income, and use one of the medicines included.
In medieval China, religion had almost nothing to do with science and technology, though astronomy was developed partly to determine auspicious dates. For the rest, science was natural curiosity, or for health, commerce or warfare. In medieval India science seems mostly to have been driven by health and commerce such asl navigation, accounting, or metallurgy. In medieval Islam, science was probably the most advanced in the world at the time, influenced by sections of the Q'uran and Hadith encouraging study and understanding of the natural world, plus the cultural stimulus of access to Greek, Roman, and Indian source materials for medicine, mathematics, physics, architecture, and so on. In medieval Europe science grew partly as a side effect of the universities which were started by the church and by leaders such as Charlemagne where theology was the primary study, but medicine and mathematics and other science was eventually introduced. This was stimulated by the influx of scientific ideas from Islam as the two civilizations were in contact primarily in rich and educated areas like Spain and the Levant, in between fighting. In the Americas, the science of the Incas and the Mayans which we know a little about seems to have been mostly astronomy, calendars, arithmetic, and medicines, much of which was associated with religion.
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Valbona Muzaka has written: 'The politics of intellectual property rights and access to medicines' -- subject(s): Human rights, Commerce, Intellectual Property, Legislation & jurisprudence, Public Health, Social medicine, Health aspects, Drug Discovery, Medical policy, Right to health 'The politics of intellectual property rights and access to medicines' -- subject(s): Human rights, Social medicine, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Globalization, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Economic Policy, Health aspects, Medical policy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / International, Right to health
by taking your medicines regularly
The book titled "Miracles of the Vault" promoted by the Health Science Institute contains information about alternative health remedies, natural cures, and traditional medicines from various cultures. It focuses on exploring unique and lesser-known healing methods that offer potential benefits for health and wellness.