Find the word definition

Crossword clues for preventive

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
preventive
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
preventive detention
preventive medicine
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
action
▪ Isabel became suddenly aware of her own vulnerability and of the need for preventive action.
▪ Sometimes, the prospect of a breach of the peace may form the basis of pre-planned preventive action.
care
▪ Also, they may do more work in the areas of community outreach and preventive care than managers of a group practice.
detention
▪ Her order of preventive detention caused consternation among lawyers over a possible breach of civil liberties.
▪ Apart from the clearly implied step toward preventive detention, it was almost impossible not to detect an underlying racism.
health
▪ The system is intended to emphasize preventive health care and reduce costs.
▪ The other is preventive health care for all, including prenatal care.
▪ They can not observe preventive health care admonitions.
Health expenditures necessitated by the inability of the illiterate adult to use preventive health care measures are not documented.
maintenance
▪ Much of the routine preventive maintenance is done by the operators who use the machines.
measure
▪ Despite this, primary preventive measures of the sort recommended by Wilson have not emerged in public policy.
▪ He is among a growing minority of physicians combining the standard care of traditional medicine with certain nontraditional treatments and preventive measures.
▪ The use of preventive measures is also illustrated.
▪ The only preventive measure researchers can take is to concentrate on what is triggering quakes on the rifts that are turned on.
▪ Seen simply as a preventive measure, education for older adults is a good investment.
▪ Currently, Medicare covers no preventive measures except for flu shots and mammograms every other year for women over 65.
▪ Accordingly, evaluation will be undertaken to ascertain that the preventive measures implemented have been effective.
▪ There are a lot of preventive measures that would reduce the number of severe mental problems.
medicine
▪ We have received clear evidence from opticians in our constituencies that the imposition of charges runs contrary to the concept of preventive medicine.
▪ There exists no preventive medicine for the pain of feeling excluded or underappreciated.
▪ The appointment of John Simon as first Medical Officer heralded the replacement of the grandiose principles of sanitary engineering by preventive medicine.
▪ It was hardly surprising that preventive medicine, and state medicine in particular, refused to give unconditional support to eugenics.
▪ He says physicians should be well-trained in standard medical care and also grounded in preventive medicine and healing alternatives.
▪ Such apathy is indicative of the generally low emphasis and under-investment in health education and preventive medicine in Britain.
▪ Laughter and fun should also be on your preventive medicine shelf.
service
▪ Child care agencies may offer preventive services at several different levels.
▪ Several states have recently put new money into preventive services for low-income pregnant women and their babies.
▪ Inevitably it is the preventive services that are most vulnerable to cuts - the playgroups and child-minder schemes, for example.
▪ But the report was limited to comparing use of six preventive services.
▪ The evidence on uptake was more mixed although there was a clear class gradient with regard to preventive services.
▪ Two dozen major California health maintenance organizations will receive a report card today on the quality of their preventive services.
▪ More financial support for family life and access to preventive services would help to reduce marital distress.
▪ The survey measured the availability of preventive services and was validated by a third party, the Medstat Group.
strategy
▪ Having said this, however, we have noted earlier the difficulties inherent in trying to mount preventive strategies.
▪ Some preventive strategies and vaccines are not used because of a perceived lack of cost-effectiveness.
▪ Too little is done to implement existing preventive knowledge or to develop preventive strategies known to be effective.
▪ An effective preventive strategy which challenged these interests would seriously disrupt or impose great costs on capitalist producers.
▪ Two sets of findings in particular suggest preventive strategies that could considerably reduce the prevalence of acute psychotic episodes.
work
▪ General preventive work is equally important.
▪ Even when children deny such beliefs, preventive work should still be done.
▪ The implications for preventive work are obvious.
▪ Third, it pointed to the necessity for critical preventive work to be recognized as a priority.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
preventive health care
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But he said there is a real need to develop more effective preventive agents.
▪ Her order of preventive detention caused consternation among lawyers over a possible breach of civil liberties.
▪ It was hardly surprising that preventive medicine, and state medicine in particular, refused to give unconditional support to eugenics.
▪ Some preventive strategies and vaccines are not used because of a perceived lack of cost-effectiveness.
▪ Such apathy is indicative of the generally low emphasis and under-investment in health education and preventive medicine in Britain.
▪ The effects of preventive and corrective measures will be monitored and the operation may be postponed until any problems have been resolved.
▪ The only preventive measure researchers can take is to concentrate on what is triggering quakes on the rifts that are turned on.
▪ The other is preventive health care for all, including prenatal care.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Preventive

Preventive \Pre*vent"ive\, n. That which prevents, hinders, or obstructs; that which intercepts access; in medicine, something to prevent disease; a prophylactic.

Preventive

Preventive \Pre*vent"ive\, a. [Cf. F. pr['e]ventif.]

  1. Going before; preceding. [Obs.]

    Any previous counsel or preventive understanding.
    --Cudworth.

  2. Tending to defeat or hinder; obviating; preventing the access of; as, a medicine preventive of disease.

    Physic is either curative or preventive.
    --Sir T. Browne.

    Preventive service, the duty performed by the armed police in guarding the coast against smuggling. [Eng]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
preventive

1630s, from Latin praevent-, past participle stem of praevenire (see prevent), + -ive. As a noun, from 1630s; in medical use from 1670s.

Wiktionary
preventive

a. 1 prevent, hindering, or acting as an obstacle to. 2 Carried out to deter military aggression. 3 slow the development of an illness; prophylactic. 4 (context obsolete English) Going before; preceding. n. 1 (context dated English) A thing that prevents, hinders, or acts as an obstacle to. 2 (context nonstandard English) A thing that slows the development of an illness. 3 A contraceptive, especially a condom.

WordNet
preventive
  1. adj. preventing or contributing to the prevention of disease; "preventive medicine"; "vaccines are prophylactic"; "a prophylactic drug" [syn: preventative, prophylactic]

  2. tending to prevent or hinder [syn: preventative] [ant: permissive]

  3. tending to ward off; "the swastika...a very ancient prophylactic symbol occurring among all peoples"- Victor Schultze [syn: cautionary, prophylactic]

preventive
  1. n. remedy that prevents or slows the course of an illness or disease; "the doctor recommended several preventatives" [syn: preventative, prophylactic]

  2. any obstruction that impedes or is burdensome [syn: hindrance, hitch, preventative, encumbrance, incumbrance, interference]

  3. an agent or device intended to prevent conception [syn: contraceptive, preventative, contraceptive device, prophylactic device, birth control device]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "preventive".

It is excellent in neuralgia, epilepsy, mania, amaurosis, whooping-cough, stricture, rigidity of the os uteri, and is supposed by some to be a prophylactic or preventive of Scarlet Fever.

Preventive boat drew closer, the voices of the men hushed, growing more uncertain as the minutes ticked by with no mermaid song.

On the first of May a convocation of Druids was held in the royal palace of the King of Connaught, and two fires were lit, between which cattle were driven, as a preventive of murrain and other pestilential disorders.

Public Health Service would pass out an antimalarial preventive called mefloquine to every doctor, health clinic, hospital, and nurse practitioner in Maryland and Virginia.

She sponged it with a solution of karalla powder as a precaution, then turned the three hoods inside out and dusted them lightly inside with the same powder as a preventive against any dampness or infection, or the tiny parasites which sometimes got on birds and caused trouble at molting.

But it is vexing, for Whewell tells me that as soon as the preventive squadron was withdrawn the trade started again, even in the Gallinas river, and on Sherbro Island, right next to Freetown, and with a little discretion we might have seized on half a dozen, loading slaves in the estuary.

On a lobbying trip to North Carolina she persuaded the legislature to set up a commission for the blind, and she went to Washington to berate it for failure to require preventive measures against ophthalmia neonatorum, an old crusade.

The pristav shrugged his shoulders, and Sigismund, feeling like one in a dream, took leave of his relations, and was escorted at once to the House of Preventive Detention.

Furthermore, Iraq relied excessively on curative treatment and paid little attention to preventive care, creating additional problems when the medicines and equipment needed for cures disappeared.

After a discourse on the long-established and universally-practised custom of free trading in Shelmerston and the wanton brutality of the preventive men, it appeared that a Sethian, Harry Fell, had been sent to Botany Bay for beating a Customs officer.

I was relieved to learn that the Princess Shams was not going to be fruitful and multiply her ugliness, thanks to her pomegranate preventive, though by rights I should have been disquieted, because I was thereby participating in one of the most abhorrent and mortal sins a Christian can commit.

A stunning decline in life expectancy, increasing infant mortality, rampant epidemic disease, subminimal medical standards and ignorance of preventive medicine all work to raise the threshold at which scepticism is triggered in an increasingly desperate population.

It is excellent in neuralgia, epilepsy, mania, amaurosis, whooping-cough, stricture, rigidity of the os uteri, and is supposed by some to be a prophylactic or preventive of Scarlet Fever.

I did not falter as I ate a hamburger, drank several gallons of coffee as a preventive measure against the cold night air, and actually paid money to a gate attendant to be admitted to Falcon Stadium, Home of the Fighting Falcons, No Alcoholic Beverages Permitted.

Florence Nightingale taught so well, will work backwards through anodynes, palliatives, curatives, preventives, until with little show of science it imparts most of what is most valuable in those branches of the healing art it professes to teach.