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Answer for the clue "Type of medical care ", 8 letters:
prenatal

Alternative clues for the word prenatal

Word definitions for prenatal in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Prenatal \Pre*na"tal\, a. Being or happening before birth.

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Being or happening before birth.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN care ▪ In 1998, just 4 percent of pregnant women failed to get prenatal care , an improvement from 6 percent in 1990. ▪ The other is preventive health care for all, including prenatal care. diagnosis ▪ Accurate ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1826, formed in English from pre- + natal .

Usage examples of prenatal.

Well, she was overdue for a prenatal checkup, and by now it should be safe to go to the Feen and get it.

The necessity for such instruction is somewhat indicated, in the effect upon the prenatal state, of such conditions as scrofula or struma, of various forms of tuberculosis and syphilis, of epilepsy, of rheumatism, and of insanity.

As you know, we only allow low-risk patients here and all patients must have regular prenatal care with a doctor.

Urgyen Bhotia said, "I find it fascinating that you would include ethics in your prenatal curriculum.

It is the simple mechanical truth that Mother is a common denominator to all the child's prenatals.

If Barbara would come to her for a prenatal check-up each week from now on, when she was in town, a pony-tail maker would be her reward.

A melange of very specific thoughts on child-rearing, education, prenatal care, preschooling, and the like, her book was an exercise in just the sort of incremental post-health care reform advocacy that the polling had indicated would be most popular.

Prenatal care of mothers and postnatal care of infants were subjects of compelling interest in those days, arriving monthly in the burgeoning women's magazines and annually in the proliferous child-care manuals.

If a patient places himself in autohypnosis and regresses himself in an effort to reach illness or birth or prenatals, the only thing he will get is ill.

Their efforts resulted in two additional stillbirths, followed by two lethal-trait bearers confirmed by prenatal testing.