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Technology Report - Taking Medicine, With a Microchip Under the Skin 科技报道 - 皮下芯片植入给药 This is the VOA Special English Technology Report. 这里是美国之音慢速英语科技报道。 Call it medicine on a microchip. 我们把它
Kenya Considers Policy to Regulate Traditional Medicines The use of plants to treat medical conditions has been an integral part of Kenyas cultures for millennia, knowledge passed down from generation to generation. Yet the conventional medical profe
May: Poor Danny. You are so enfeebled! Daniel: Don't worry. No big deal. Just a common cold. May: Mom called just now saying that she and Dad will be back later. Do you want to speak to them on phone? Daniel: No. You can never count on the grown-ups
Doctor: Here you are. You left the medicine here. May: Sorry. I was too worried. Doctor: I firmly believe that you love your brother very much. May: Absolutely. By the way, do you sell any traditional Chinese medicine? Doctor: Yes, we have some Chine
Doctor: What can I do for you? May: I need some medicine. Doctor: For whom? May: My younger brother. He suffers from a bad cold. Doctor: What symptoms does he have? May: Fever and a bad cough. Doctor: I got it. Don't worry, just a common cold. May: W
By Alisha Ryu Nyeri, Kenya 22 May 2006 Jack Githae, herbal doctor, is standing next to a young MUIRI tree at his clinic in Nyeri, Kenya For thousands of years, people living around Mount Kenya in the
By Greg Flakus New Orleans 26 April 2006 watch New Orleans Jazz report New Orleans is recognized as the place where the music called “jazz” had its birth, around a century ago. It is also the site
By Joe Bavier Abidjan 25 October 2006 Nearly four years into international mediation aimed at reuniting war-divided Ivory Coast, the U.N. Security Council is preparing to pass a new resolution creating another transitional period. Despite the effort
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is proposing to mediate between the West and Iran, telling an Italian newspaper that he's prepared to act as a go-between to improve relations that have been further strained over Iran's nuclear program. Syrian Presi
Chernobyl Disaster Leads to Advances in Science, Medicine The accident at the Chernobyl nuclear plant did much more than change the lives of hundred thousands of affected people. It also contributed greatly to Western science. Physicists and medical
It's been said that while everyone loves learning something new, people don't always like being taught. A scientist from Colorado is working to change that. John Cohen still remembers his very first lecture, thirty years ago. My slides didn't work an
英文歌词: That original feeling never went away 最初的感觉从未远离, That's why Im standing here today. 于是我一直站在这里。 WhoaWhoa So many up and downs 人生有如此多的起伏, And nothing has changed 可这感觉从未改变, That's why you know I'm here t
ENVIRONMENT REPORT — April 12, 2002: Medicinal Plant Conservation By Mario Ritter This is the VOA Special English ENVIRONMENT REPORT. Throughout history, people around the world have used traditiona
By Noel King Khartoum 13 September 2006 A group calling itself al-Qaida in Africa has reportedly claimed responsibility for the death of a Sudanese editor in Khartoum. Mohamed Taha was found beheaded last Wednesday. In the days following Taha's deat
Heads of state from North Africa, the Middle East and Europe launched a new Euro-Mediterranean Partnership Sunday, aimed to bring the region closer politically, economically and culturally. Lisa Bryant has more for VOA from Paris. French President N
By Lisa Schlein Geneva 15 December 2006 A former Ugandan minister who has mediated peace efforts between the government and the rebel Lord's Resistance Army says she is optimistic that a peace deal can be reached. Lisa Schlein in Geneva interviewed
Arthur Ammann discovered that mothers could transmit HIV or AIDS to their babies through the placenta or breast-feeding Jan Sluizer | San Francisco 04 February 2010 California immunologist Arthur Ammann pioneered research that drastically cut the HIV
By Steve Herman New Delhi 16 May 2007 Adequate health care remains unavailable to most of India's citizens, especially in rural areas. Even those fortunate enough to have access to good care, however, cannot be certain that a prescription from a reli
By Melinda Smith Washington, DC 11 December 2006 watching Skipping Medications Skipping medications can be harmful The older we get, the more medications many of us seem to need to stay healthy. It takes more than just a good memory to keep track of
By Carol Pearson Washington 13 March 2007 watch Medication and Children A major study finds that 80 percent of children in U.S. hospitals receive medication that has been tested and approved only for adults. This often leaves pediatricians to a pote