“And it’s distressing for us to see.”
In the meantime, patients may have been through a distressing process when no cancer is present.
It's been particularly distressing to see the disease's disproportionate impact on communities of color.
Terminal confusion is distressing to watch and must be even more distressing to endure.
You may notice that certain news sources use communication styles or content that you find particularly distressing or triggering.
The symptoms are so distressing, a drug company scientist wrote in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, that patients may feel “death is a welcome result”.
Researchers say academic institutions could learn from other professions where distressing events are common, such as in emergency services or the military.
“This important work shows just how distressing cancer can be,” said Professor Hein van Poppel, a urological cancer specialist and the EAU’s adjunct secretary.
The letter said that neither of them had read the advertising insert before publishing it, a fact that they called “distressing” and described as an “internal failure”.
Whitmer said recent news that the federal government had failed to properly maintain its national stockpile of essential medical equipment was "incredibly distressing."
COLE: Perhaps more than anyone else I know, you’ve been involved in several of the most distressing stories of what has proved to be a very distressing year.
While no amount of money can ever replace a life, insurers have been doing all that they can to help families cope financially through these unprecedented and distressing times.
That would kill the deal and be deeply distressing for a continent already in conflict with the Trump administration over trade, climate change, military spending and multilateralism generally.
Emotionally, suicide is enormously intense and distressing: 'holistically', it is disturbing that we live in a world where some people attempt suicide: ethically, attempted suicide is challenging for clinicians.
The experience of seeing someone you love go through a difficult death – particularly at home, where distressing memories may be impossible to escape from – is an emotional legacy that stays with you, potentially for the rest of your life, Jones said.
Trauma counsellors employed to help Facebook moderators cope with the distressing images they're confronted with every shift were routinely pressured by managers to share details of confidential staff therapy sessions according to The Intercept's sources (Gizmodo).
John Woodcock, Labour MP for Barrow and Furness, told MailOnline: "These latest distressing revelations occurred under the nominally new management at the zoo and underline why the government must overhaul the whole inspection regime which is allowing this to happen.
In a letter to Education Secretary Gavin Williamson, Ms Green accused the government of failing to prepare for the likelihood that the virus could spread among students and said it was "deeply distressing" students would not get "the university experience they deserve".
The force was criticised after advertising unpaid roles in its digital forensics team, with an advert that warned volunteers would “routinely come across distressing imagery including indecent images, fatal road traffic accidents, live CCTV footage recovery of incidents”.
Other apps we found, although obviously designed and intended for younger kids, rather than being entirely inappropriate, featured content that was nonetheless potentially disturbing, such as pulling out a baby panda's broken teeth or healing distressing looking cuts and bruises on a mermaid.
distressing
adj all
- causing distress or worry or anxiety
Example: distressing (or disturbing) news
adj all
- bad; unfortunate
On this page, there are 20 sentence examples for distressing. They are all from high-quality sources and constantly processed by lengusa's machine learning routines.
Grid-Flow technology
Just use the " " button to fragment sentence examples and start your learning flow.
Example output from one of your searches: