Biomaterial vs Biomedical - What's the difference?
biomaterial | biomedical |
A nonviable, biocompatible material used in a medical device, intended to interact with biological systems or to evaluate, treat, augment, or replace any tissue, organ, or function of the body.
Of or pertaining to biomedicine.
* 2006 , Mwenda Ntarangwi, David Mills, Mustafa H. M. Babiker (editors), African anthropologies: history, critique, and practice , page 253:
* 2007 , Athena McLean, The person in dementia: a study in nursing home care in the US , page 28:
* 2011 , Gosia M. Brykczy?ska, Joan Simons, Ethical and Philosophical Aspects of Nursing Children and Young People , page 208:
As a noun biomaterial
is biomaterial.As an adjective biomedical is
biomedical (pertaining to biomedicine).biomaterial
English
Noun
(en noun)biomedical
English
Adjective
(-)- The research problem was biomedical' in nature but the research approach adopted was multidisciplinary, with '''biomedical''', psychological and anthropological aspects. Despite joint efforts, our ' biomedical colleagues felt that [...]
- Alzheimer's disease and related dementias have come to be defined as biomedical in nature.
- Clearly, some research undertaken by children's nurses is biomedical in nature although a significant amount of contemporary research is qualitative focusing on children's experiences and evaluating services.
