Q&A on Clinically Relevant Herb-Drug Interactions
In this clip (10 of 10), Dr. Gurley answers questions from the audience.
This clip is part of the lecture "Clinically Relevant Herb-Drug Interactions: Past, Present, and Future," by Bill J. Gurley, Ph.D., professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Pharmacy and director of the UAMS Clinical Pharmacokinetics Research Laboratory.
This lecture, given in 2014 at NIH, is part of the NCCAM Online Continuing Education Series. Free CME/CEU credit is available to health professionals (see http://nccam.nih.gov/training/videolectures).
Видео Q&A on Clinically Relevant Herb-Drug Interactions канала NCCIH
This clip is part of the lecture "Clinically Relevant Herb-Drug Interactions: Past, Present, and Future," by Bill J. Gurley, Ph.D., professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Pharmacy and director of the UAMS Clinical Pharmacokinetics Research Laboratory.
This lecture, given in 2014 at NIH, is part of the NCCAM Online Continuing Education Series. Free CME/CEU credit is available to health professionals (see http://nccam.nih.gov/training/videolectures).
Видео Q&A on Clinically Relevant Herb-Drug Interactions канала NCCIH
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
NCCIH Online Continuing Education SeriesIntroductionNCCAM's MissionFecal Transplants as Probiotics: Can They Change the Microbiome?Two VisionsPsychological Stress and Sudden Cardiac DeathHow can we use functional imaging to look at the therapeutic effect of acupuncture?Some Considerations in Clinical StudiesTreatment Decisions in End-of-life CareComparative Effectiveness ResearchDr. Josephine Briggs Talks About JAMA Viewpoint ArticleManipulation of the Microbiome by ProbioticsA Cost-Effectiveness StudyGlycan-based Natural ProductsQ&A on Spirituality and HealthIdeas from Outside the MainstreamMultimodal Functional Neuroimaging: Part IIMaking Treatment Decisions: Considering the EvidenceSafety of AcupunctureWhere Should We Go?