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safety

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safety

(sāf′tē)
n. pl. safe·ties
1. The condition of being safe; freedom from danger, risk, or injury.
2. A device designed to prevent accidents, as a lock on a firearm preventing accidental firing.
The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

safety

EBM
Relative freedom from harm, a term which, in clinical trials, refers to an absence of harmful side effects resulting from use of the product under investigation; it may be assessed by laboratory testing of biological samples, special tests and procedures, psychiatric evaluation, and/or physical examination of subjects/patients.
Segen's Medical Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

safety

Public health The state of being secure or safe from injury, harm, or loss; a judgment of the acceptability of risk–a measure of the probability of an adverse outcome and its severity associated with using a technology in a given situation–eg, for a Pt with a particular health problem, by a clinician with certain training, or in a specified treatment setting. See Injury, Injury prevention, Negotiated safety, On-line safety.
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Patient discussion about safety

Q. what measures are in place to ensure the safety of vaccines. Hello there, I read the previous question which was asked by Edmund. This question made me to think, what measures are in place to ensure the safety of vaccines.

A. Not only related to Autism, we have to be very cautious when we vaccine for other diseases too. As with all medical products, vaccines undergo extensive testing to document their efficacy and to explore potential harms. Before a potential vaccine is licensed for use, FDA scientists conduct a thorough and independent review of the testing data and often employ the help of an FDA public advisory review committee. In addition, FDA rigorously oversees the manufacturing process for vaccines used in this country - including approval of each step in the process and on site inspection. Following licensure, vaccines continue to be monitored through information shared by parents, doctors, and other public health officials.

Q. Contact lenses I’m 17 years old girl, and I have glasses since third grade. I never had any real problems with wearing them,. my best friend always encourage me to try contact lenses, but it seems so strange to put something on directly on your eyes- is it safe? How difficult is it to do?

A. Consult your ophthalmologist (eye doctor) before you decide.

More discussions about safety
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References in periodicals archive
[4] UL Standard for Safety for Electrical Apparatus for Explosive Gas Atmospheres-Part 11: Intrinsic Safety "i", UL 60079-11, Underwriters Laboratories Inc.
The BA326C has ATEX Group II category 1G (EEx ia IIC T5) intrinsic safety certification and FM intrinsic safety and nonincendive approval.
Products were displayed in simulated division 1, division 2, and non-classified areas to demonstrate TURCK PA's ability to provide cordsets, junction boxes, fieldbus physical media, intrinsic safety solutions, sensing products and measurement products for all facets of pharmaceutical processing.
Intrinsic safety started in Europe after World War II, when the number of facilities using oil and volatile chemicals increased.
All AE5000 instruments have uninterruptible power supplies and intrinsic safety barriers.
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