I. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
antenatal care
▪
regular antenatal care
care home
Care in the Community
care label
care package
care worker
community care (= care for the sick, the old etc in their community rather than in hospital )
▪
Several voluntary organizations are involved in providing community care.
customer service/care (= serving and looking after customers )
▪
Our aim is always to raise the level of customer service.
day care centre/services/facilities
▪
subsidized day care facilities
day care
▪
subsidized day care facilities
dental treatment/care
▪
Dental care was free in the 60s.
extra care
▪
Drivers are advised to take extra care .
extreme care/caution
▪
It is necessary to use extreme caution with chemicals.
great care
▪
John always takes great care over his work.
health care (= care from doctors, nurses etc )
▪
Many Americans cannot afford even basic health care.
health care
▪
The government has promised wide-ranging health care for all.
hospital treatment/care
▪
What do older people think of hospital care?
intensive care unit
▪
The man is in the hospital’s intensive care unit .
intensive care
▪
He is still in intensive care in Bristol General Hospital.
left...in the care of
▪
She left her son in the care of a friend.
loving care
▪
the loving care with which the house has been restored
loving care
▪
What that child needs is plenty of loving care .
medical attention/treatment/care
▪
The injury required urgent medical attention.
not that I care (= I do not care )
▪
Sarah has a new boyfriend – not that I care .
primary care
▪
a primary care physician a doctor who provides primary care
primary health care
residential care
respite care
sb’s creative/caring/feminine etc side
▪
The art program is meant to bring out children’s creative side.
the caring professions (= ones that involve looking after people )
▪
A high proportion of people in the caring professions are women.
the health care system
▪
The West should be helping these countries to develop modern health care systems.
wraparound care
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
extra
▪
With Spectra or Dyneema, we have to adjust in the sleeving, and here a little extra care pays off dividends.
▪
The Senate added a $ 16 billion tobacco tax to provide extra health care funding for uninsured children.
▪
On the way down, the path can be muddy and steep and in places needs extra care .
▪
Take extra care if you are travelling.
▪
They tipped me for the extra care .
▪
We need to take extra care when talking to elderly people because they may not see or hear so well.
▪
In areas where gardens are protected and some extra care is provided, most cabbage varieties can be virtually a year-round crop.
good
▪
Others mentioned the convenience of having a booked admission date and better surroundings and care .
▪
He danced her around the room, promised to take better care of her than anyone ever had.
▪
Felicity loves it too, and probably takes far better care of it than I ever did.
▪
We know that owners take better care of homes than renters.
▪
She took good care of him.
▪
Not all good day care is so costly.
▪
We have to get him out Voice over Those who are to be brought out will receive the best of care .
▪
We want better education, better roads, and better health care , for the same tax dollar.
great
▪
George is very kind and caring and took great care over Lennie.
▪
In some stores, great care has gone into making that transformation pleasant.
▪
Reintroduction of food after elemental regimens must nevertheless be undertaken with the greatest of care irrespective of whether or not elimination diets are used.
▪
He began to weigh his words with great care , struggling to express himself as economically and clearly as possible.
▪
She wears a pink suede jacket with a studded fringe which she takes great care to hang.
▪
Taking great care where she placed her feet, she trod softly down the stairs.
▪
My choice had to be made with the greatest care and the most alert diagnostic skill.
▪
The stock must be chosen with great care .
institutional
▪
We re-interviewed those principal carers whose relatives, etc had moved to permanent institutional care by the end of one year.
▪
The avoidance of unnecessary institutional care by assessment of need for care.
▪
As we saw in Chapter 2 approximately 5 percent of those aged 65 + live in some form of institutional care .
▪
In institutional care there should be no place for such people.
▪
First is the possibility of an unnecessary increase in the number of old people consigned to institutional care .
▪
Even so, they were generally being sustained at home at a cost below that of institutional care .
▪
Only about 3-4% of all people aged 65+ are in some form of institutional care .
▪
Cases were closed when a client died, moved away, or went into permanent institutional care .
intensive
▪
Infusion of 50 to 100 mEq per 12 hours requires very close monitoring, usually in an intensive care setting.
▪
For the moment, Becky remains in intensive care , after falling from her horse on Saturday.
▪
Her son remained in guarded condition Monday in an intensive care unit.
▪
We have had public reports of a mortally ill little girl being unable to gain treatment in a paediatric intensive care unit.
▪
He was put on a life support machine in intensive care .
▪
This is not reported in the available literature on intensive care and may be a unique finding.
▪
Will he accept that there is indeed an acute shortage of intensive care beds for children?
medical
▪
There were lectures on quite advanced medical care , on intelligence-gathering, signalling and demolitions.
▪
They mix medical care and great menu variety for safe, often lifetime weight loss.
▪
Finally, such medical care will generally involve invasive drug therapy.
▪
Women detainees often get inadequate medical care .
▪
General practitioners have always had to manage and plan their businesses and are constantly adapting to changes in medical care .
▪
These include expenses for training and lost productivity, which equal and / or exceed medical care costs.
▪
With good medical care they often get better for a while.
▪
Or should they be blamed on inadequate medical care , poor diet or other environmental factors?
nursing
▪
Every nurse in the ward is responsible for promoting good nursing care .
▪
The following is an example of some cognitive objectives for teaching the nursing care of a patient recovering from heart surgery.
▪
The expected benefits of improved knowledge and nursing care by the learner can be summarised in aims and objectives.
▪
This can occur at any time but particularly when the student has been observed or supervised in her nursing care .
▪
Communication within the caring team, and the formation of nursing care plans, ensures continuity of patient care.
▪
He or she may have several diseases concurrently which will complicate nursing care .
▪
The student will learn realistic ways of ensuring good nursing care even when the workload is heavy.
▪
To develop an understanding of the psychological aspects of nursing care . 4.
patient
▪
Computer generated protocols Editor, - Richard J Lilford and colleagues show that structured methods of recording data can improve patient care .
▪
It is often the physician, as the person responsible for the activities required for patient care , who adopts this style.
▪
But better patient care is the ultimate aim.
▪
In these days of siege, psychiatrists must treat disaffection through militant group action and advocating conscientious, high-quality patient care .
▪
Criticism of the service side of training should be encouraged so improvements in student learning and patient care can be developed.
▪
The patient care records are reviewed against the established criteria.
▪
Hospitals now sell patient care including operations, X-rays, and blood tests, charging for everything.
▪
As well as acting as a support for the patient she will be gaining additional information relevant to her understanding of patient care .
personal
▪
They combined domestic, personal care , and specialist skills, taught by other professionals, such as physiotherapy, or speech therapy.
▪
The charge nurse and the nursing supervisor are the ones to talk to if there is any problem with personal care .
▪
All our residents receive a very special, personal kind of care .
▪
About 1 in 4 were in nursing and personal care facilities or offices and clinics of physicians.
▪
Looking at the evidence available, there seem to be four main principles which determine who offers personal care .
▪
For personal care the chain of complaint is: physician, charge nurse, nursing supervisor, hospital administrator, hospital director.
▪
My brief review of personal care given by relatives has stressed the theme of variation, especially by gender.
▪
The study, at a large Fortune 100 manufacturing company, focused on employees who provide personal care to an older relative.
primary
▪
However, it is possible that the clients who benefit mostly from primary care might be the nurses themselves.
▪
Medical groups often woo primary care doctors while sharply limiting the number o f specialists allowed on their referral lists.
▪
It recommends that resources for the developments in primary and community care to pump-prime and provide transitional support be secured urgently.
▪
Lahey Hitchock operates the largest physician practice in the state, employing more than 200 primary care doctors.
▪
Undergraduate students have begun to recognise the importance of primary care .
▪
Some primary care doctors' incomes have gone up slightly, and the others have seen their incomes remain steady.
▪
Thus hospital recommendations, based on discounted prices, can result in high cost commitments for primary care .
▪
Under managed care , patients are assigned to a primary care physician who determines what health services they will receive.
private
▪
A large number of private care agency customers are elderly or disabled people who are not social services clients.
▪
A private care home in my constituency accepted an elderly lady for respite care.
▪
The hon. Member for Wakefield said that he did not like private institutional care .
▪
Further moves could also be made towards increasing the two-way interaction between public and private health care sectors.
▪
Nine out of 10 directors say there should be compulsory registration of private care agencies.
▪
That also means a commitment to private residential care as much as to local authority residential care.
▪
Compensation packages for expatriates coming to Britain usually cover schooling costs, private medical care and housing costs.
▪
There are good examples of what can be done in private care .
reasonable
▪
Employees have a duty to take reasonable care in the performance of their duties.
▪
If a teacher fails to exercise reasonable care to protect his or her students from injury, the teacher is negligent.
▪
You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour.
▪
If teachers do not use reasonable care , there is a breach of duty, and they are negligent.
▪
Employees are themselves under a duty to take reasonable care not to injure others in the course of their work.
▪
The duty in the law of negligence is not a duty to exercise reasonable care to avoid risk of causing injury.
▪
As it fails to enable Alan to take reasonable care for his own safety it will not have this effect.
▪
But if Clarence had exercised reasonable care , the court would have to decide whether the Trust were at fault.
residential
▪
It is supposed to end the uncertainty surrounding the limits of control of young people in residential care .
▪
The next chapter explores social work practice where a family member begins to need residential care .
▪
Out of 174 local authorities, 97 or over half had no residential care facilities for children and 24 had no arrangements at all.
▪
Women outnumber men by three to one in residential care .
▪
Thus Southwark, which exports 70% of adults needing residential care , will not receive adequate funding to pay for future placements.
▪
Fostering breakdowns account for an increasing number of admissions to residential care .
▪
That also means a commitment to private residential care as much as to local authority residential care.
▪
Then after ten weeks in residential care a family meeting was planned.
social
▪
Key points are: The report considers key national issues under the headings of community regeneration and social and community care .
▪
Coherent planning and coordination of health and social care would be facilitated by coterminous boundaries between the two authorities.
▪
These opinions will then be borne in mind when it comes to planning future health and social care policies.
▪
Many social services staff care considerably about the inadequacies of the policies they administer.
▪
Family support services. 5. Social care planning to mobilize packages of care. 6.
▪
At what point does social care become nursing?
▪
The care of stroke patients involves a plethora of different health and social care workers.
▪
For the minority who receive social care , the characteristics are significant reminders of their individuality and diversity.
special
▪
Both groups need very special care - yet so often they are the forgotten people in our community.
▪
The brave became a great chief, and he always took special care of his colt, which became a great horse.
▪
Bright new facilities and therapies were provided, plus enlightened teaching and special care .
▪
He took special care of the remaining one, and often slept with it in the corral.
▪
Thousands upon thousands of dollars would go into special care , training, and equipment for her.
▪
One example might be where a newborn child developed an infection requiring special care , but recovered in a few days.
▪
Country roads are often narrow and winding, so drivers should take special care and slow down.
■ NOUN
child
▪
It did nothing to provide better child care for women wishing to return to work.
▪
Most of them are wealthy men whose wives raise their children . Child care is not high on their agenda.
▪
Power relationships and relationships within informal networks are vitally important in all child care work.
▪
And the state, asked to investigate, says that dressing up is an appropriate part of a child care curriculum.
▪
In this area, solicitors can specialise in matters such as child care and other areas which specifically relate to local government.
▪
Instead of hiring child care I traded it with other parents: I had a list as long as my arm.
▪
We also have vacancies in specialist departments such as medicine and child care where the appropriate qualifications and experience are essential.
▪
Fortunately, women have changed sufficiently to make child care an issue.
customer
▪
This isn't just customer care: this is better margins and hard profit.
▪
Training implies that they do not, yet nobody seems to be able to point to any deterioration in customer care .
▪
Nothing about environmental impact, customer care , or good business practices.
▪
The delegation looked at a range of hotel operations including food preparation, customer care programmes, sales and marketing and budgeting.
▪
John had high standards of customer care and quality service.
▪
He still had a lot of contacts who valued his priorities of customer care and quality.
▪
Hotels have high standards of customer care and lift maintenance organisations have to understand these requirements.
day
▪
And an information day is being planned for anyone wanting to learn more about the day care centre appeal.
▪
Child care: day care, nursery school, babysitting.
▪
You are the person who actually provides the day to day care for residents.
▪
According to industry statistics, companies lose a total of $ 3 billion a year to workers' day care problems.
▪
Full day care facilities are available on request.
▪
His vision of the future is centered on individuals: job training, access to college, day care and so forth.
▪
The State of California shall provide a child welfare building to serve as day care centres for single parents.
▪
He pledged that pensioners using the earmarked homes for short stays and for day care would be found alternative facilities.
facility
▪
Day care facilities for the mentally handicapped include what used to be known as adult training centres.
▪
We re licensed as an acute care facility .
▪
Out of 174 local authorities, 97 or over half had no residential care facilities for children and 24 had no arrangements at all.
▪
With this merger, there are concerns about what happens to the workers in these health care facilities .
▪
Full day care facilities are available on request.
▪
About 1 in 4 were in nursing and personal care facilities or offices and clinics of physicians.
▪
Meanwhile, however, the lack of adequate community care facilities has led to a campaign to save the old mental hospitals.
▪
There are no health care facilities . 7.
health
▪
The result should be health care that is more predictable and efficient.
▪
It is essential that Londoners have the same rights of access to acute health care as their provincial counterparts.
▪
Process is defined as the sequence of established activities or procedures used by providers in the delivery of health care .
▪
In order to do this health authorities must have comprehensive information about the existing use of health care .
▪
Reproductive health care , crucial to women, was, as it had ever been, slighted.
▪
In Britain for the foreseeable future the ultimate purchaser of 80% or more of health care will continue to be the Treasury.
▪
Physicians and other health care workers are trying to design a health care system.
home
▪
In-service training, weekly group meetings and monthly supervision sessions were all provided for the home care aides.
▪
Long-term nursing home care would be the only benefit not available as soon as some one became a legal California resident.
▪
In the last decade the private sector has started to develop the amount of residential and nursing home care it provided.
▪
In the last six months of 1994 we had 65 people on home care .
▪
It has become the main provider of affordable home care for the elderly.
▪
Spending most of each day in out-of-\#home care is a real risk factor for a baby.
▪
The night sitter left at 7 a.m. and the home care aide was due to come at 8 a.m.
▪
The numbers of men, women and children covered by home care with 24 hour on call has doubled in a year.
hospital
▪
Products offered by service industries include hospital care , dental treatment, holiday arrangements and accountancy services, for example. 5.
▪
She still needed hospital care but certainly seemed to be getting better.
▪
She is in hospital care until the baby-swop is sorted out.
▪
The training of more specialists and the provision of more day hospital care was duly set out.
▪
A constant theme in research concerned with the hospital care of older people is the discharge from hospital back to the community.
▪
Private nursing homes have higher levels of frailty than residential homes but not usually as high as long-stay hospital care .
▪
However, hospitals can not be closed down overnight and there is a need for a more positive approach to hospital care .
order
▪
For those reasons I allow the appeal and I substitute an interim care order .
▪
I was still under a care order so the Social Services put me in a hostel.
▪
The order will terminate when the child ceases to be of compulsory school age or if a care order is made.
▪
It can make a care order , a supervision order, a s8 order and a family assistance order.
▪
It can also make a s8 order in addition to a supervision order but not a care order.
▪
The local authority asserted that the threshold conditions, under which a care order could be made, had been met.
▪
The courts must now make care orders committing children to the care of the local authority.
▪
Social workers say they never had enough evidence of maltreatment to go to court for a care order .
plan
▪
The addition of the care plan will enable service agreements to be tailored to meet the needs of the individual user.
▪
Investor-owned managed care plans routinely take 20 percent to 30 percent of premium dollars off the top for profit and administration.
▪
As part of the care plan .
▪
The products and the care plans they produce are more in-depth.
▪
Communication within the caring team, and the formation of nursing care plans , ensures continuity of patient care.
▪
Her health care plan drew fire.
▪
They must also show their HIV/AIDS services are fully integrated into their community care plans .
▪
For some people, personal care plans will be drawn up.
reform
▪
Then there is the still unworkable sum which overhangs all this budgeting: how much health care reform will cost.
▪
The goals and activities in this plan are consistent with the goals set forth in recently proposed plans for health care reform .
▪
Many general practitioners fear that the community care reforms will increase their own workload, too.
▪
Doble pointed to one prime example of poor communication between elected officials and constituents: the health care reform debate.
▪
It also examines the relation between care management and care programming and raises some questions about future developments in the light of community care reforms .
▪
A far-reaching and comprehensive strategy, carefully integrated with broader plans for health care reform , is required.
▪
In the autumn of 1991 the Bush administration showed no interest in health care reform .
▪
The debate over health care reform in 1993-94 offers a vivid example.
respite
▪
This has worked well for both permanent and respite care .
▪
Any possibility of further reductions in respite care should be strenuously resisted.
▪
Coupled with the financial implications if carers decided they could no longer shoulder this burden the case for supporting respite care becomes overwhelming.
▪
Some proposals include provision of a day centre and respite care .
▪
It briefly outlines activities such as helplines, respite care services and consultation on community care proposals.
▪
A private care home in my constituency accepted an elderly lady for respite care.
▪
It is also developing a respite care service.
▪
A carers group might help, but what about some form of respite care for both the carer and the son?
service
▪
They could not cope even with very enhanced staffing levels and very supportive community care services .
▪
To deal with illness, they fund health care services .
▪
We are entering a period of deterioration in health care services .
▪
The salons, formerly known as Toni &038; Guy, offer clients a complete hair care service and have been completely refurbished.
▪
How much is spent on health care services ?
▪
And it establishes care trusts and sets out legislation on long-term care excluding nursing care from community care services .
▪
An important feature will be the investigation of the relationship between women workers and women users of primary health care services .
▪
We've already identified a need for a home care service which we aim to meet.
system
▪
This paper underlines the importance of maintaining a functional health care system even during times of political change and unrest.
▪
Whatever Congress does to fix it is likely to put severe pressures on the rest of the health care system .
▪
We can now deal with the main problems that could arise in the new community care system .
▪
That was the conclusion of a General Accounting Office report in 1992 on fraud in the health care system .
▪
Primary care physicians' experience of financial incentives in managed-care systems .
▪
Once they are enmeshed in the often-chaotic foster care system it is extraordinarily difficult to get out of it.
▪
New hair care system One of the most exciting happenings in hair and scalp care lately comes from respected trichologist Philip Kingsley.
▪
Our health care system is out of control.
take
▪
He was offering me the trip of a lifetime, and all I had to do was take care of the meals.
▪
When sanding take care not to round the sharp edges.
▪
The expert's advice today was take care .
unit
▪
From these studies we've developed criteria to identify who needs to go to a coronary care unit and who doesn't.
▪
There is a 16-bed intensive care unit and two operating rooms that can also be expanded.
▪
Mrs Carrington takes up the account from the time when her husband was admitted to the intensive care unit .
▪
Ludington plans to introduce the therapy into the transitional care unit that caters to preemies at the University of Maryland Medical Center.
▪
Facilities will include an intensive care unit and an oiled bird cleaning facility.
▪
He is in stable condition in the intensive care unit at Kaiser Medical Center in Vallejo.
▪
The second is, if there are to be intensive care units , what share of resources should they have?
▪
Her son remained in guarded condition Monday in an intensive care unit .
worker
▪
Hazards associated with heating and walking are examples of matters to which care workers must attend.
▪
Maritza started to work with the foster care workers to get her children back.
▪
The revised guidelines are expected to avoid giving care workers specific advice on how to physically restrain absconders.
▪
Social workers and other primary care workers are well placed to identify people who have long-term social difficulties and poor coping resources.
▪
Health care workers should have a tuberculin skin test at least every two years.
▪
Yet it illustrates vividly the extent of the power which may be implicit in the relationship between care worker and old person.
▪
Further information: Recruiting and employing a personal care worker by M Dunne.
■ VERB
manage
▪
The St Helens project was initiated and led by the health authority but really managed by the joint care planning team.
▪
Under the regional managed care systems, most Medicaid patients would be served by health maintenance organizations.
▪
Doctors' incomes Doctors are generally earning less these days as managed care becomes a larger part of the medical marketplace.
▪
Meanwhile, economists argue about whether the true cost of healthcare has even gone down under managed care .
▪
He says that managed care firms integrate physical and mental health care.
▪
Shares of the managed-care company rose 1 1 / 2 to 58 1 / 4.
▪
California leads the nation in shifting to managed care , with San Diego County in the vanguard.
▪
But now, cost pressures in competitive managed care markets have led to cost-cutting.
need
▪
To succeed, you needed to take great care that you peaked just as the winning-post hove into view.
▪
This child also needs consistency in his care and love.
▪
The next chapter explores social work practice where a family member begins to need residential care .
▪
Who is likely to need long-term care insurance?
▪
On the way down, the path can be muddy and steep and in places needs extra care .
▪
They are usually set up near their convents, for premature and sick children need constant care .
▪
We need to take extra care when talking to elderly people because they may not see or hear so well.
▪
It will need your care to become established, especially in hot, dry weather.
provide
▪
Reflect the principal aspirations of the professions to provide better care .
▪
Or one county could provide child care while the next county did not.
▪
He says they've got the interests of the whole county to consider and they want to provide modern patient care .
▪
As the staff looks toward the future, its game plan is to provide quality care .
▪
The Health Education Council project on providing effective health care in a multi-racial society provides a useful checklist for assessing local services.
▪
She had a network of neighbors and relatives that provided child care .
▪
Community-based clinics, such as Aldershot Health Centre, can provide complete care for leg ulcers.
▪
Some patients report troubles persuading their managed-care health plans to provide cutting-edge care .
receive
▪
When a child or young person is received into care a placement with a carer or carers has to be made.
▪
He estimated that half had been receiving substandard care .
▪
I must give you my personal assurances that this infant is receiving perfect care .
▪
Or it could mean you received no care at all.
▪
Did they receive similar care at the same time or in the same order?
▪
Also, the percentage of District women who receive adequate prenatal care has improved somewhat since the start of the decade.
▪
Further requests were made to receive S into care .
▪
In many places, the children of these immigrants were prevented from going to school or receiving medical care .
require
▪
This requires care and patience in the preparation, performance, and marking of the tests but it can be most rewarding.
▪
Obviously, sleeping pills are not harmless; they are drugs that require caution and care in use.
▪
A child may, for instance, be born with serious handicaps or developmental problems requiring extended periods of care .
▪
Or should they concentrate their efforts on looking after those sufferers who require nursing care in day hospitals or wards?
▪
It does not require science to inform us that infants require infant care and children require child care.
▪
If the disorder is severe the patient may also require full care and, very occasionally, physical control.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
domiciliary services/care/visits etc
▪
Developments in day care, the home help service and other domiciliary services were the currency of growth in these departments.
▪
Hence domiciliary visits by medical staff are an integral part of any specialist service.
▪
It supplements care by kin, but families continue to provide the bulk of domiciliary care.
▪
Last year only voluntary Welfare Officer alone, made over 102 domiciliary visits.
▪
Nevertheless, companies trading in domiciliary care are now beginning to multiply - some from a base in the residential sector.
▪
One of the principal domiciliary services is that of home helps.
▪
Success typically gives access to one existing service, such as domiciliary care, and rejects another, such as residential care.
▪
Traditionally the burden of long-term domiciliary care has fallen on women.
don't give a hoot/don't care two hoots
not care/give tuppence
not know/care beans (about sb/sth)
tender loving care
▪
Mom gave us kids a lot of tender loving care.
▪
Right now I just need some tender loving care.
▪
At some level they still cling to the idea that tender loving care is the only factor in raising kids.
▪
Hospitals needed some one to give tender loving care to chil-dren, social agencies had various similar needs, and so on.
▪
It is the routine and tender loving care of the staff that create the best atmosphere.
▪
Lucky patients get superb nursing care, infused with professionalism and tender loving care.
▪
Mandy had plied her with tender loving care until the tears had come.
▪
The Backup New yachts suffer from teething problems, and older yachts need lots of tender loving care.
▪
Voice over Millie will need tender loving care and a lot of medical treatment before going home.
▪
With glass and tender loving care it can be done.
the utmost importance/respect/care etc
▪
Brian was always keen to stress that the comfort and wellbeing of the birds was of the utmost importance.
▪
Everyone has the utmost respect for Rickey Henderson.
▪
How soon and how broadly will you communicate that the changes at hand are of the utmost importance?
▪
Hygiene and safety take priority on the sunbeds while personal supervision is regarded as of the utmost importance on the toning tables.
▪
In fact I have the utmost respect for it.
▪
In particular in the sophisticated world of alchemy, the resonances of chemical and other truths were of the utmost importance.
▪
It is of the utmost importance that it is the mind of the human operator doing the selecting.
▪
Professors Berry and Mott are right to stress that the support of the child and the family is of the utmost importance.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Care of the environment has become a priority in government thinking.
▪
All employees have been trained in the care of young children.
▪
hair-care products
▪
I'd advise you to follow a new skin care routine.
▪
Movies set you free from your cares for a while.
▪
She has become a leading expert on the care and maintenance of Renaissance paintings.
▪
skin care lotions
▪
The note on the box read, "Fragile - handle with care ."
▪
These photocopiers require a little extra care to keep them running right.
▪
Your father will need constant medical care .
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
A comprehensive review of the patient can be achieved through the use of the care plan.
▪
Finally, such medical care will generally involve invasive drug therapy.
▪
He had spent two hours taking care of his tires in the rain.
▪
I planned this thing with care .
▪
It recommends that resources for the developments in primary and community care to pump-prime and provide transitional support be secured urgently.
▪
Mud-Pony-Boy healed the horse with loving care and herbal compresses for the injured foot.
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Take care to fit the diodes and electrolytic capacitors the correct way round.
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The other is preventive health care for all, including prenatal care.
II. verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
about
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All you've ever cared about is being approved of, like a little girl at a party.
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In the end, all you really cared about was what the Krausses of this world would think.
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Even the cash-flow predictions they cared about so much were nothing to her but answers she wanted ticked.
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The results were shocking, at least to people who care about squandered money.
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All he cares about are women and booze.
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Because no one I cared about ever looked at me as if I were beautiful.
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I care the way Jefferson cared about his rats and their portal shunts.
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The last person West buried that he cared about was his wife.
deeply
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Billie could see their closeness when Adam let her out, saw that they cared deeply for each other.
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We care deeply about u hat governments do, but this is a book about how they work.
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I care deeply about the comedy in the movie, that it's well-executed and fresh.
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He cared deeply about his beloved state of Massachusetts and about our country and its future.
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Yes, she had really cared deeply .
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He cared deeply for the human condition.
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It hurt her to think that Fernando cared deeply enough for another woman to do it.
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The marriage was a good one and Brenda and her husband clearly cared deeply about each other.
enough
▪
Some one cares enough to sponsor his education.
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He couldn't move as Richmann passed out of his field of vision, not caring enough to even notice Carrefour any longer.
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She thought she would never care enough about anyone to give birth to them or to kill them.
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She had not tried hard enough because she did not care enough.
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Only Jezrael doesn't care enough to find me, does she?
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I don't frankly think he cares enough either way to worry.
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After months of weeping and shouting and apologising, she did not care enough .
for
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Once the young are born they may be cared for by both their parents for many days.
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They want to have babies, but only as many as they can care for .
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Some older people want to be cared for by their children, others most definitely do not.
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Some small but particularly beautiful areas of woods, cliffs and islands are preserved and cared for by the National Trust.
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He was cared for by the Sisters of Mercy at the Horsforth home for retired clergy.
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If the message could have been from some one you care for , then where's the harm in it?
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Thus, those who are committed to caring for and working with old people have first to face two facts.
how
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Sailors waiting there hauled them roughly on to the ship, not caring how they landed.
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Alyssia didn't care how she looked.
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I don't care how long it takes us.
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As far as he is concerned, nobody cares how accurate our portrayal of Claudia's love life is.
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And even people who say they don't care how they look care how they look.
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Since Caliban wants to give, I don't care how much paper I waste.
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Obviously Delia Cope is a white middle class racist woman who really doesn't care how she oppresses us as Black women.
less
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Many of them care less about the exchange rate than about what is shown on the chart on the right.
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Today, corporations have become more streamlined and less caring .
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But at this moment Kate could not have cared less if he was a mass murderer.
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Guess their Sunday viewers are mostly trailer dwellers who could care less about public affairs.
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I was sopping, and I didn't care less .
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Now I seem to care less and less.
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They sort of couldn't care less if you were going to leave at the end of the fourth year.
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The suits overseeing news and editorial functions have no loyalty to this community and could care less about it.
much
▪
He didn't much care for it now that he looked at it closely.
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Nobody cared much what happened to it.
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I do not care much now about the way the women gape at me when I walk around in the village center.
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If Mr Parnham doesn't like it and we're both fired then I don't much care .
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Their menus had been planned with as much care as any part of the mission.
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Anyhow, he did not care much .
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Though I was floundering, I did not much care .
really
▪
She had contrarily thought that if he really cared he would have come running after her.
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In the end, all you really cared about was what the Krausses of this world would think.
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Do you know, sometimes I feel that the only person he really cares for on this earth is the Begum.
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I don't really care about what happened last year.
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I have to say I didn't really care much for that kind of approach.
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How deeply did people really care ?
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Even if that flat pass from Wilkinson was forward, it was so short that nobody really cared .
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But be honest, do you really care ?
■ NOUN
baby
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Sangenic is so easy and quick to use that it allows you more time to care for your baby .
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The infant's death occurred when her father was caring for the baby while his wife was at work.
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It was then that Carrie took over, dividing her time between caring for her baby and attending to her customers.
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You will soon see how Pampers are caring for your baby ... and your baby's world.
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I share at least half the household duties, including feeding and caring for the baby while my partner works and plays.
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The couple caring for the baby in their Middlesbrough home realise there is a long way to go.
▪
Visits Heidi's mum Christine, who is unable to care for baby because of severe post-natal depression, visits every day.
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I no longer need to work and she was delighted when I offered to care for the baby during the week.
child
▪
They get married and move, and may have young children to care for.
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The study was of 482 children who were cared for by a private pediatric practice in suburban Philadelphia.
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The animal kingdom gets its fair share of attention as children learn how to care for pets.
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With one small child to care for, she went on welfare, and soon won a scholarship to college.
▪
Currently grandparents are raising 3. 4 million children; 6 million families depend on grandparents for primary child care .
▪
Girl, now show me my way, for I have a child to care for.
▪
Eliminating state barriers to checking criminal backgrounds of child care workers.
family
▪
Relatives are often fearful of complaining lest there is a backlash in the kind of treatment or care the family member receives.
▪
Women who really care about their families make it fresh every day.
▪
They don't care about their families .
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She was cared for by various families of the city and earned money for her board by attending small children.
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They don't care about the family man getting shot, they don't care about the families.
▪
What did Claire care about families ?
▪
He didn't care if his family thought him great.
health
▪
However, in health care the concept is more difficult to explain.
▪
She spends $ 300 or less on health care a year and pays $ 1, 625 in Medicare and Medigap premiums.
▪
Take, for example, the vexed subject of health care .
▪
She knew nothing about health care .
▪
The trend is likely to place unprecedented demands on the health care system, principally for nursing and custodial care.
▪
It was also a strong year for health care investing.
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No employer would have to pay more than 7. 9 percent of payroll on health care .
▪
During the quarter, investors continued to snap up selected stocks in two hot industries: technology and health care .
hospital
▪
The new hospital will care for the annual 3,000 or so wildlife casualties in the area.
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But they believe there will always be a need for hospitals to care for volatile children who have exhausted every other alternative.
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The staff were used to the rigours of war ... The hospital was opened to care for Amnerican casualties in 1942.
▪
Improving models I work in a psychiatric hospital on a unit caring for functionally ill elderly people.
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Relatives may make a gift to a local hospital that has cared for a loved one.
▪
The trial continues. HOSPITAL nurses caring for elderly patients are fighting plans to ban uniforms on the wards.
others
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Spurred by the horrors he witnessed in war, Cheshire dedicated his life to caring for others after it was over.
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Of course, he'd given up medicine to pursue comedy, but he was absolutely at his best when caring for others .
▪
He seemed to care little about what others , beyond his parents, thought of him.
▪
Lucky child, to be so well cared for while others suffer so much!
▪
I have cared for others all of my adult life.
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The ultimate virtue, I thought, is caring for others .
▪
Who relieves the state of the burden of caring for others ?
parent
▪
Many adult children gain great happiness from caring for a much-loved parent in the closing years of their life.
▪
Will restoring some economic equity to the family guarantee that every child will have responsible and caring parents ?
▪
It's the strain of caring for a parent with Alzheimers disease.
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The ideal of caring for aging parents is sufficiently strong that even the most undeserving aging parents can ride its coattails.
▪
We are also taught to be caring and nurturing parents .
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The opportunity exists right there to be a wise and caring parent .
▪
Many daughters who are caring full-time for a parent or parents at home have financial worries too.
▪
It is women who have traditionally borne the daily burden of caring for ill parents , children, relatives and friends.
patient
▪
The abilities of staff and availability of facilities to care for critically ill patients vary in all areas of health care.
▪
In both black and Latino practices, doctors were more likely to care for the poor patients .
▪
These will be in effect, a statement of the treatment and care a patient should receive with associated standards attached.
▪
He had been caring for a stroke patient who seemed to understand much of what was said to him.
▪
The student who has cared for a patient is in the best position to evaluate and report on his or her progress.
▪
Most people caring for diabetic patients realise the importance of the patient actively participating in the very first injection of insulin.
▪
As a junior nurse it is important that you receive extra instruction and practice under supervision before caring for these patients .
▪
Specialist nurses Many health authorities employ nurses in specialist roles to care for patients with particular needs.
people
▪
The government's being urged to provide more financial support for people who care for sick or disabled relatives.
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Few people notice or perhaps care when such inspections are directed at commercial enterprises.
▪
Some older people want to be cared for by their children, others most definitely do not.
▪
A few people care about news, and only a tiny percentage of those care about serious news.
▪
There are some people who don't care if you are a hero or not.
▪
Only shallow people care about appearances, so if I look like this, I must be deep.
▪
But other people wouldn't care about that.
▪
James was also tremendously loyal to people he cared about, and in him I found a true friend.
■ VERB
love
▪
I really want to know she is loved and cared for.
▪
The heart-centred loving and caring aspect of our make-up is where compassion resides.
▪
What is important, however, is to convey to children that they are loved and cared for.
seem
▪
He didn't seem to care that Nick was so much younger than he was.
▪
He seemed to care little about what others, beyond his parents, thought of him.
▪
But very few people seem to care .
▪
But the public seemed not to care .
▪
He didn't seem to care .
▪
But my psychology professors seemed not to care at all about minorities.
▪
Few academic historians seem to care about the literary elegance that sustains the essay form.
▪
The building is crawling with people who seem to care less about the job itself than about holding on to it.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
domiciliary services/care/visits etc
▪
Developments in day care, the home help service and other domiciliary services were the currency of growth in these departments.
▪
Hence domiciliary visits by medical staff are an integral part of any specialist service.
▪
It supplements care by kin, but families continue to provide the bulk of domiciliary care.
▪
Last year only voluntary Welfare Officer alone, made over 102 domiciliary visits.
▪
Nevertheless, companies trading in domiciliary care are now beginning to multiply - some from a base in the residential sector.
▪
One of the principal domiciliary services is that of home helps.
▪
Success typically gives access to one existing service, such as domiciliary care, and rejects another, such as residential care.
▪
Traditionally the burden of long-term domiciliary care has fallen on women.
don't give a hoot/don't care two hoots
not care/give tuppence
not give a fig/not care a fig (about/for sth/sb)
not give/care a sod
not know/care beans (about sb/sth)
tender loving care
▪
Mom gave us kids a lot of tender loving care.
▪
Right now I just need some tender loving care.
▪
At some level they still cling to the idea that tender loving care is the only factor in raising kids.
▪
Hospitals needed some one to give tender loving care to chil-dren, social agencies had various similar needs, and so on.
▪
It is the routine and tender loving care of the staff that create the best atmosphere.
▪
Lucky patients get superb nursing care, infused with professionalism and tender loving care.
▪
Mandy had plied her with tender loving care until the tears had come.
▪
The Backup New yachts suffer from teething problems, and older yachts need lots of tender loving care.
▪
Voice over Millie will need tender loving care and a lot of medical treatment before going home.
▪
With glass and tender loving care it can be done.
the utmost importance/respect/care etc
▪
Brian was always keen to stress that the comfort and wellbeing of the birds was of the utmost importance.
▪
Everyone has the utmost respect for Rickey Henderson.
▪
How soon and how broadly will you communicate that the changes at hand are of the utmost importance?
▪
Hygiene and safety take priority on the sunbeds while personal supervision is regarded as of the utmost importance on the toning tables.
▪
In fact I have the utmost respect for it.
▪
In particular in the sophisticated world of alchemy, the resonances of chemical and other truths were of the utmost importance.
▪
It is of the utmost importance that it is the mind of the human operator doing the selecting.
▪
Professors Berry and Mott are right to stress that the support of the child and the family is of the utmost importance.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Buy her some flowers to show her you really care .
▪
I'm very lucky to have a husband, family and friends who care about me.
▪
Of course I care about Kirsty - that's why I want to help her.
▪
Of course I care about the homeless and the unemployed, but what can I do?
▪
She thinks we're interfering but we're only doing it because we care .
▪
Some kids' parents don't care what they do.
▪
Thousands are dying from disease and starvation and yet no one seems to care .
▪
We make a range of natural, additive-free foods for people who really care what they eat.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
But audiences didn't care if the film died.
▪
But Theresa would not care , being almost glad to be all wrong in some sphere.
▪
Despite knowing all this, and caring about it, I would sometimes lose the rag with him.
▪
He was saying that he cared about them too much to let them feed on self-delusion.
▪
If Foley were a traitor, he did not care who knew it, it would seem.
▪
The building is crawling with people who seem to care less about the job itself than about holding on to it.
▪
We care not a pin, though they are ne'er so sad.