Some researchers contend that sympathetic nerve blocks are not the panacea they are made out to be. |
|
Although no panacea can be prescribed, co-education and free mingling of both sexes at the primary level would be of great help. |
|
Meanwhile, women need to be advised that a caesarean section is not a panacea. |
|
Admittedly, the life course approach may not be the panacea for all our ills but it may well be. |
|
Weight loss in and of itself is probably not the panacea you are looking for. |
|
The drugs are not a panacea but they do improve quality of life and boost life expectancy. |
|
Thus schools have become the all-purpose panacea, the one-stop solution to any government headache. |
|
They are here for serious pampering, thalassotherapy being the fashionable panacea for 21st Century stress. |
|
Gene therapy will never be a panacea, but ultimately it will be one method among many for helping patients with severe genetic disease. |
|
We believe that neither is a panacea and that holistic provision should include both methods. |
|
Furthermore, he said, it was not reasonable to expect the sauna to be a panacea for so many diseases. |
|
Mental health care may function as a panacea for many different personal and social problems. |
|
Stopping smoking is hard, but a variety of methods can help even though none is a panacea. |
|
Different ideologies, the Left, the Right and the Centre, have failed to provide a panacea for war and a formula for peace. |
|
The plans to utilise the marine outfall sewer in the early 1990s was lauded by its supporters as the panacea to the area's sanitation problems. |
|
Military power is not a panacea unless it is coupled with the soft skills of nation-building and, yes, global social work. |
|
But, like any tool, it is not a panacea for the difficulties of modern civilization. |
|
She's their panacea, the be-all and end-all of publicity stunts, an icon ready made for media and the furthering of agendas. |
|
We are not presenting this as being a panacea, as being something that is a magic bullet for all medical conditions, but it is another option. |
|
The gold standard became a panacea particularly for proponents of laissez-faire economic policy. |
|
|
Many people in the United States think that screening is a panacea, a way of warding off disease and staying healthy perhaps forever. |
|
Sunset supporters, admitting that Sunset is not a panacea, offered two admendments to save the Colorado Sunset law. |
|
You don't hear people talking about any other part that the markets will take care of it, that free trade is the panacea for every ill. |
|
A panacea ingredient for creating the perfect formulation with soy still does not exist. |
|
Alchemists never transmuted metals, never found a panacea, and never discovered the fountain of youth. |
|
She pointed out to the gathering that music is the most potent panacea against the trials and tribulations of life. |
|
Political Straussians and their neoconservative allies argue that the spread of democracy is a panacea for many of America's global problems. |
|
Second, every slogan, every panacea, no matter how sound in theory, needs to survive in the chill wind of reality. |
|
And so I don't think anyone looks at screening as a magic panacea to save the health budget. |
|
It may not be a panacea, but we're going to need every weapon we can find against bacterial infection. |
|
Nevertheless, it highlights the dangers of naive advocacy of urban consolidation as a panacea. |
|
The hospital management and the council seem in agreement that cash is a palliative but not a panacea. |
|
It's not a panacea, a cure-all for farm financial ills, or a guarantee of profit. |
|
But I find that their panacea to all the country's problems revolves around increased public spending and, illogically, reduced taxation, all brought about by cost savings. |
|
The new constitution, instead of being the panacea for every grievance so delusively represented by its advocates will be found upon examination to be like Pandora's box. |
|
Clearly the struggle for civil rights continues and desegregated schools are an important achievement that must be preserved, but school desegregation is not a panacea. |
|
The transmutation was variously an end in itself, a means by which to make an elixir of life, and a route to the creation of a panacea, or universal medicine. |
|
However, such technology is no panacea, and should be used discriminately. |
|
A rose is a rose is a rose, but a carrot is a carrot is a freakish, furcated panacea. |
|
They are by no means a panacea and careful management of such funds is required. |
|
|
Democracy cannot be idolized to the point of making it a substitute for morality or a panacea for immorality. |
|
Acknowledging that electronic tagging is not a panacea, Hazin said such an approach would help to attain a more accurate figure on total catch. |
|
On the other hand, the determination to present the Kyoto Protocol and the forthcoming global pact as a panacea is absolute tomfoolery. |
|
I am not so presumptuous as to consider that this process is the perfect panacea for everyone. |
|
This can be a help, but on its own is no panacea for all the problems facing the rural dweller. |
|
The electoral process cannot be turned into a fetish worshipped as a sort of political panacea for all social ills. |
|
But anyone who thinks that such a panacea exists is either kidding himself or trying to kid the public. |
|
Its aim is not to endorse and disseminate in an uncritical fashion the plurality of literacy as a panacea. |
|
Not all university heads are convinced that big new halls of residence are the great panacea. |
|
But this is not to say that sustainable transport solutions from elsewhere are necessarily the panacea for Mumbai's transport difficulties. |
|
But it should pay attention to King when he says that regulation is no panacea. |
|
All of the above sounds vaguely familiar – the echoes of Margaret Thatcher and her harsh panacea for the UK economy are obvious. |
|
The mistake that is often made is to say that the gun registry is a panacea for crime, to deal with criminality. |
|
As already mentioned, the infrastructures and the clearing houses are not a panacea. |
|
While strengthening social fabric is an ideal solution, it is not a panacea. |
|
However, economic valuation is not a panacea for decision-makers facing difficult choices. |
|
Also at the Shanghai conference, several papers demonstrated that the use of administrative data is by no means a panacea for burden reduction. |
|
The Internet and the ICTs must not be regarded as a panacea for all the world's ills. |
|
The participants warned, however, that no single agency or institution could claim to be a panacea for all economic ills. |
|
We know that treaties are not a panacea. they are one tool among many that allow all of us social and economic prosperity. |
|
|
An intercultural dialogue is not a panacea, if one wants to avoid conflicts, but culture is an important factor in conflict resolution. |
|
Of course, the diamagnetically stabilised levitation is unlikely to be a panacea for every application where magnetic bearings were previously considered. |
|
Of course, research in itself is no panacea, but more successful players like General Mills, Quaker Oats, Nabisco and, of course, Kraft, have turned it to good account. |
|
In the case of the electromagnetic force, a panacea was found in 1947, excising infinity to reveal finite, correct, answers. |
|
The insulting needs to stop, but so too does the idea that tax cuts and family values are a panacea to all socioeconomic issues. |
|
Relying on a phone call a week from your kids is hardly a panacea for loneliness. |
|
Even a ban on semi-automatics is no panacea in a world full of powerful shotguns. |
|
She is aware that this has not been a panacea or overnight solution in Sweden, but regards it as by far the best of a dubious set of alternatives. |
|
It was supposed to be a panacea for the jobless, founded on the peculiarly European notion that if more people work less lots of good jobs will be created. |
|
Northwestern Ontario can be considered to be a panacea for weekend warriors looking for that ultimate wilderness experience. |
|
Unfortunately, a quality daycare centre isn't a panacea. |
|
As they made unmannerly plain a couple of centuries ago, most Americans do not admire Britain's parliamentary democracy, which is, after all, no panacea. |
|
In eager expectation of the panacea, we'll just have to muddle along with the traditional cures: water before bedtime, a bit of sugar, food packed with cysteine. |
|
Pedicellaria are a good means of defense against ectoparasites, but not a panacea as some of them actually feed on it. |
|
Whenever Salmon struggles, the hitter-friendly Ballpark here has been a panacea. |
|
Under dramatic headlines announcing miracles of healing, the remedy is presented as a universal panacea able to cure almost every aliment, even the most severe. |
|
Without being a panacea, a comprehensive international legal framework would seal the existing gaps in international law and become a coordination tool. |
|
It was noted that the mere existence of legislation was not a panacea and that long-term public reform was needed, including the monitoring and review of such legislation, to achieve consistent application and adaptation. |
|
Microsoft clearly states that its Xss filter technology is no panacea against cross-site scripting flaws. |
|
The cold, hard truth is that in Afghanistan today we need that security for the type of ideal panacea that the NDP thinks is just going to arrive somehow on its own. |
|
|
Decentralization is therefore neither a panacea nor a shortcut. |
|
However, raising relative wages is not the panacea to this challenge. |
|
Among lessons learnt in the implementation of the projects, he noted that South-South cooperation was not a panacea, but an opportunity for all partners to share experience and learn from one another. |
|
A recent study by Peter Moss et al suggests that while much may be gained by placing ECLC within the remit of ministries of education, this is not a panacea. |
|
But while individualized funding can help respond to many identified problems, it is not a panacea for resolving all problems related to disability supports. |
|
The availability of venture capital is not a universal panacea. |
|
It may not be the panacea to solve all of the problems but it is a concept that has proven to be successful and can serve as a model for other troubled communities. |
|
But if e-voting is no panacea, there are no good technical or political objections to imaginative experiments with this and other new forms of popular participation. |
|
Thus Ukip supports a Yes vote and the BNP opposes it, both panacea parties with nasty tendencies, fundamentally unserious: their policies don't stack up. |
|
Yet as we adjust to the new global environment we must avoid the populist appeal of protectionist measures which are at best a short-term panacea for long-term ills. |
|
Reinvigorated party systems are not a panacea for public participation and public accountability in global politics, but they could bring major advances. |
|
I do not support the view of many on the 'no' side that NATO is the bogeyman of the world, nor that the UN is necessarily the panacea for all global ills. |
|
I agree with my fellow Members, and in particular with my colleague Mr Paasilinna, that we cannot be doctrinaire in matters relating to energy and that we must not think of renewable energy as a panacea in itself. |
|
A dose of Corbynism may be the panacea Labour think they need, though that may leave them no more electable. |
|
But there are also some disadvantages: process-level management is not a panacea. It does not replace hierarchical management and it does not help to produce a medium or long term strategy or vision. |
|
Although Ryan disclaims class mixing as a panacea and asserts that his project is merely meliorist, he forgets that magical thinking takes over on the ground. |
|
The availability of an appeal of an NCUA examination to an administrative law judge and then to the FFIEC's ombudsman may not be the panacea that credit unions seem to assume. |
|
Pine tar is an effective antiseptic and disinfectant when applied to cuts on the skin, but Berkeley argued for the use of pine tar as a broad panacea for diseases. |
|
Although the protective principle is far superior for prosecuting cyberterrorists to the other traditional principles of jurisdiction, it is not a panacea. |
|