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The Collaborative International Dictionary
biomedical

biomedical \bi"o*med`i*cal\ Pertaining to the biological and physiological aspects of medicine.

2. Of or pertaining to biomedicine.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
biomedical

also bio-medical, 1961, from bio- + medical.

Wiktionary
biomedical

a. Of or pertaining to biomedicine. n. A product of the biomedicine industry.

WordNet
biomedical

adj. relating to the activities and applications of science to clinical medicine; "biomedical research laboratory"

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "biomedical".

They lived by a different kind of morality, involving the German biomedical vision that justified killing in the interests of preserving the blood and genetic integrity of the Volk.

The most prestigious scientific institute in Germany, the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Anthropology, Human Genetics, and Eugenics, the German Research Council, and their extensive biomedical and eugenics research programs, had no qualms about the killing of so-called inferior and polluted races.

Nazi culture, if the group be understood as a common commitment to shared cultural ends and to the biomedical ideology defining the Jew as bacillus.

It is an ongoing struggle to find and maintain identity, However, when identity appears in the cohesive properties of the Nazi biomedical vision, the answer to the question diminishes, if not altogether represses, the underlying fragmentation anxiety of each individual member of the group.

The Washington planners are trying to be helpful in this, and there are new programs for the centralized organization of science all over the place, especially in the biomedical field.

In real life, the biomedical sciences have not yet reached the stage of any kind of general applicability to disease mechanisms.

I have a stronger hunch that the greatest part of the important biomedical research waiting to be done is in the class of basic science.

It seems like a useless old superstition to keep the Emperor from using modern biomedical techniques.

Ben was presenting a major research project from the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with all the prestige that automatically conferred.

Standing against the far wall of the living room, holding a glass of white wine and talking to Mark Lederer of the Boston Biomedical Research Institute, stood Caroline Lampert.

He called one of the Boston Biomedical names that Neymeier had researched for him, a woman with no kids and an ambitious publication record.

If the Relatives had tapped the Boston Biomedical line, it was probably at the trunk.

Caroline Lampert, all of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the article reportedly concerns a radical new approach to attacking carcinomas through genetically engineered retroviruses.

It would mean added fame for The Norwich Institute of Biomedical Research and Technology, an already famous institution.

He had compared the recorder charts with instrument readouts, with biomedical records.