Results 311 to 320 of about 574,105 (363)
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The view of the pharmaceutical industry
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1994Rhône-Poulenc Rorer has committed itself to the development of artemether because we believe the drug will be of considerable benefit to sufferers from severe falciparum malaria, and because it is a stable, effective and economical compound that can be given by intramuscular injection.
G, Roche, J P, Helenport
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The pharmaceutical industry as an informant
The Lancet, 2002The pharmaceutical industry spends more time and resources on generation, collation, and dissemination of medical information than it does on production of medicines. This information is essential as a resource for development of medicines, but is also needed to satisfy licensing requirements, protect patents, promote sales, and advise patients ...
Joe, Collier, Ike, Iheanacho
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Pharmacogenetics and the Pharmaceutical Industry
Current Pharmaceutical Design, 2010The detailed knowledge of the human genome has not fulfilled its promise as yet. It seems fair to say that we are far from treating existing diseases by therapeutic interventions developed on the basis of genetic knowledge. However, pharmacogenetics has shown to be useful in improving our understanding of pharmacotherapy.
Raaijmakers, J.A.M. +2 more
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Metabolomics in the pharmaceutical industry
Drug Discovery Today: Technologies, 2015Metabolomics has roots in the pharmaceutical industry that go back nearly three decades. Initially focused on applications in toxicology and disease pathology, more recent academic and commercial efforts have helped advance metabolomics as a tool to reveal the molecular basis of biological processes and pharmacological responses to drugs.
Michael D, Reily, Adrienne A, Tymiak
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Epidemiology in the pharmaceutical industry
Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, 2000A survey assessing the practice of epidemiology in the pharmaceutical industry was sent to all member companies and research affiliates of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) and to six non-member companies. Eighty-three companies were surveyed.
L H, Roht +6 more
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1986
The pharmaceutical industry today is very largely a product of the post-World War II period. Few of the medicines used now were available before the war and many were not introduced until after 1960. A very limited range of products was available in the 1930s, and natural products such as morphine, digitalis and quinine were very important.
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The pharmaceutical industry today is very largely a product of the post-World War II period. Few of the medicines used now were available before the war and many were not introduced until after 1960. A very limited range of products was available in the 1930s, and natural products such as morphine, digitalis and quinine were very important.
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Physicians and the Pharmaceutical Industry
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1990Excerpt To the Editors:I appreciate the efforts of the American College of Physicians Ethics Committee in developing the position paper (1) on physicians and the pharmaceutical industry.
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Biotechnology and the Pharmaceutical Industry
Cancer Investigation, 1993(1993). Biotechnology and the Pharmaceutical Industry. Cancer Investigation: Vol. 11, No. 4, pp. 451-457.
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THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY REPORTS
JAMA, 1960The pharmaceutical industry's major task is to provide an abundant supply of safe, effective prescription drugs; to discover, screen, develop, and make available new drugs which will decrease or end suffering; to promote longer and happier lives; and to manage to stay in business while it is so doing.
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