生活口语流利说(中级)
主讲老师:金格妃
课程特色:语音入门:名师示范带读,摆脱中式口音、课程精讲:24个单元实用场景轻松应对、实战演习:听说同步强化,视听讲练结合、外教口语:纯正欧美外教,互动即学即练
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课程与PC端同步更新,充分利用零碎时间。做题
海量精选试题,想练就练,瞬间提分。答疑
网校名师24小时在线答疑解惑直播
名师大咖面对面,有问有大收获多。Not so, according to Phyllis Greenberger, president of the Society for Women's Health Research.
"When researchers have looked at sex differences, they sometimes find that something works better in a man versus a woman or the other way around," she said. "So it's not just about women anymore. It's really understanding the mechanism of disease."
Lobbying efforts by women's health advocates led Congress to pass a law in the 1990s requiring federally-funded research to include more women in large clinical trials.
Before then, it was widely believed that what works in men works for women.
Janine Austin Clayton, an ophthalmologist by training who directs the Office of Research on Women's Health at the National Institutes of Health, says participants in NIH-funded research now include an equal number of men and women.