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How native speakers pronounce “medicine

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fired from Apple it was awful tasting medicine but I guess the patient needed it sometime life sometimes life's going

Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement 2005 · Stanford

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fired from Apple it was awful tasting medicine but I guess the patient needed it sometime life sometimes life's going

Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement 2005 · Stanford

We're going to change gears here for a second. The caduceus, or the symbol of medicine, means a lot of different things to different people,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

means a lot of different things to different people, but most of our public discourse on medicine really turns it into an engineering problem.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

The ethicists and epidemiologists try to figure out how best to distribute medicine, and the hospitals and physicians are absolutely obsessed

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

with their protocols and checklists, trying to figure out how best to safely apply medicine. These are all good things.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

at some level that the textbook of medicine is closed. We start to measure the quality of our health care

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

and find out exactly what's wrong with it, because the textbook of medicine is not closed.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

is not closed. Medicine is science. Medicine is knowledge in process.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

Medicine is science. Medicine is knowledge in process. We make an observation,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

and then we make a prediction that we can test. Now, the testing ground of most predictions in medicine is populations.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

as a Gaussian or a normal curve. Therefore, in medicine, after we make a prediction from a guessed explanation,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

we test it in a population. That means that what we know in medicine, our knowledge and our know-how,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

that has ever been guided by a randomized controlled clinical trial, what we consider the best kind of population-based evidence in medicine. People talk about thinking outside the box,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

because he had contacted other patients who had experienced it. And so exceptions and outliers in medicine teach us what we don't know, but also lead us to new thinking.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

Now, very importantly, all the new thinking that outliers and exceptions lead us to in medicine does not only apply to the outliers and exceptions.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

Silence can also be rather uncomfortable. Where the blanks are in medicine can be just as important

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

Sarcoma may not matter a whole lot in your life. But where the blanks are in medicine does matter in your life.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

I didn't tell you one dirty little secret. I told you that in medicine, we test predictions in populations, but I didn't tell you,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

but I didn't tell you, and so often medicine never tells you that every time an individual

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

that every time an individual encounters medicine, even if that individual is firmly embedded in the general population,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

where in that population the individual will land. Therefore, every encounter with medicine is an experiment.

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

And the outcome will be either a better or a worse result for you. As long as medicine works well, we're fine with fast service,

Why curiosity is the key to science and medicine | Kevin B. Jones

Then try evidence-based recommendations laid out by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. What's really cool is that there's a highly effective therapy

Do You Really Need 8 Hours of Sleep Every Night? | Body Stuff with Dr. Jen Gunter | TED · TED

all about the slimy, smelly, creepy underbelly of nature, medicine and technology. Now, I think most of us would agree

Why you should love gross science | Anna Rothschild

for the betterment of society and humanity, whether it's in medicine or in saving lives or doing much of the stuff

What Kosovo Can Teach the World About Freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu | TED · TED

So it's not really surprising that I would grow up to be an elite athlete, a sports medicine doctor, and a fierce advocate for women, right? I mean, check me out.

What Women Athletes Need to Unlock Their Full Potential | Kate Ackerman | TED · TED

at the Harvard School of Public Health. I went to Penn and did my internal medicine residency. And then I went back to Harvard and did a sports fellowship

What Women Athletes Need to Unlock Their Full Potential | Kate Ackerman | TED · TED

Why are you doing all this schooling? What are you afraid of? And if you're really interested in sports medicine, why don't you become an orthopedic surgeon?"

What Women Athletes Need to Unlock Their Full Potential | Kate Ackerman | TED · TED

I was more interested in physiology. I really thought that sports medicine should be interdisciplinary. And I cared about endocrine, hormones and cardiovascular systems.

What Women Athletes Need to Unlock Their Full Potential | Kate Ackerman | TED · TED

because we're most responsive to everything around us. And after I tried this medicine of just sitting quietly a few times, I noticed something strange.

Silence, the Universal Medicine | Pico Iyer | TED · TED

a crease in her skin. In medicine, we call that crease the allergic salute. It's usually seen among children who have chronic allergies.

What makes us get sick? Look upstream | Rishi Manchanda

Now you might ask, and it's a very obvious question that a lot of colleagues in medicine ask: "Doctors and nurses thinking about transportation and housing?

What makes us get sick? Look upstream | Rishi Manchanda

that transforms their assistance, transforms the way they practice medicine. That process is a quite simple process.

What makes us get sick? Look upstream | Rishi Manchanda

Well, the short answer is that it's just not profitable to pursue a new use for an existing medicine, especially for a rare disease,

How Nearly Dying Helped Me Discover My Own Cure (and Many More) | David Fajgenbaum | TED · TED

He had done the first of three randomized controlled trials that showed a benefit for this medicine in this subgroup of patients. And I learned about Mason, photographed here,

How Nearly Dying Helped Me Discover My Own Cure (and Many More) | David Fajgenbaum | TED · TED

LN: One of the other interesting things to me, I studied the history of medicine, and what's so interesting is, for a lot of history, medicines were cure-alls, right?

How Nearly Dying Helped Me Discover My Own Cure (and Many More) | David Fajgenbaum | TED · TED

for a lot of history, medicines were cure-alls, right? Like, the 19th-century patent medicine that was, like, for your indigestion and your infertility, and your da da da.

How Nearly Dying Helped Me Discover My Own Cure (and Many More) | David Fajgenbaum | TED · TED

and your infertility, and your da da da. And then, so much of modern medicine was evidence-based, targeted therapy, like, laser-focused therapies.

How Nearly Dying Helped Me Discover My Own Cure (and Many More) | David Fajgenbaum | TED · TED

I wanted AI to be developed for good. I worked on applications in medicine, for medical diagnostics, climate, to get better carbon capture.

The Catastrophic Risks of AI — and a Safer Path | Yoshua Bengio | TED · TED

"That's a libertarian canard." You can want modern medicine without wanting us to have burned all that coal.

I’ll Probably Lose My Job to AI. Here’s Why That’s OK | Megan J. McArdle | TED · TED

from agriculture and weaving into science and medicine. It's also, as we've been hearing all week,

I’ll Probably Lose My Job to AI. Here’s Why That’s OK | Megan J. McArdle | TED · TED

And I took this at face value until one afternoon when I was 16. I went into their medicine cabinet looking for something and I found an unmarked pill bottle with dosage instructions.

Lessons from My Father’s Final Days | Laurel Braitman | TED · TED

Pain into sweetness. Sorrow into medicine. Two years after the fire,

Lessons from My Father’s Final Days | Laurel Braitman | TED · TED

(Applause) And I don't mean just medicine. I actually mean reframing our thinking

A 3-Step Guide to Believing in Yourself | Sheryl Lee Ralph | TED · TED

And I started testing it on myself. And it's been 11.5 years that I've been in remission on this medicine. I mean, the moment that this drug started saving my life,

How Do You Turn Setbacks Into Motivation? A Doctor + A Trauma Specialist Answer | TED Intersections · TED

CD: That's unbelievable. But how did you think of seeing if one medicine could work for something else?

How Do You Turn Setbacks Into Motivation? A Doctor + A Trauma Specialist Answer | TED Intersections · TED

And how it changes you to be exposed constantly to human suffering, which I'm sure it does in medicine, too. You're just exposed to human suffering.

How Do You Turn Setbacks Into Motivation? A Doctor + A Trauma Specialist Answer | TED Intersections · TED

Now they're planning their wedding together. And, you know, this idea that the medicine was there, but we humans hadn't done the work to match it together,

How Do You Turn Setbacks Into Motivation? A Doctor + A Trauma Specialist Answer | TED Intersections · TED

it could unlock some of the most powerful breakthroughs in science and medicine. But I'll be honest, we had no idea if AI could actually generate DNA.

How AI Could Generate New Life-Forms | Eric Nguyen | TED · TED

Let's look ahead. In this future, we can make truly personalized medicine. Imagine prompting an AI like Evo with your genome,

How AI Could Generate New Life-Forms | Eric Nguyen | TED · TED

and guiding treatment options based on your own DNA. But why even take medicine when you might have a permanent cure? We might choose to alter our DNA outright,

How AI Could Generate New Life-Forms | Eric Nguyen | TED · TED

who happen to have different reproductive systems. Gender-specific medicine is good for men, too. But you bring to a crisis the person you already are,

4 Powerful Poems about Parkinson's and Growing Older | Robin Morgan | TED Talks · TED

from this terrible concoction, and the crazy thing is that putting diethylene glycol in your medicine was not a problem,

Steven Johnson: How humanity doubled life expectancy in a century | TED · TED

and medical staff burnout. Together with our collaborators from Stanford School of Medicine and partnering hospitals,

With Spatial Intelligence, AI Will Understand the Real World | Fei-Fei Li | TED · TED

CA: So we can expect to see some pretty dramatic health medicine breakthroughs in the coming few years.

How AI Is Unlocking the Secrets of Nature and the Universe | Demis Hassabis | TED · TED

performance usually plateaus. This has been shown to be true in teaching, general medicine, nursing and other fields,

Eduardo Briceño: How to get better at the things you care about | TED · TED

sometimes to really surprising answers. An indigenous medicine woman once told me that love is to walk on Mother Earth

What foods did your ancestors love? Aparna Pallavi

(Laughter) They named their discovery “fire medicine,” the Chinese word for gunpowder.

A Firework Ladder to the Sky — and the Magic of Explosive Art | Cai Guo-Qiang | TED · TED