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group practice
[ groop prak-tis ]
noun
- Also called group med·i·cine [groop, , med, -, uh, -sin]. the practice of medicine by an association of physicians and other health professionals who work together, usually in one suite of offices.
- any similar practice by an association of professional persons.
- Law. a system in which legal services are provided by a corporation retaining and paying a number of lawyers.
group practice
noun
- a medical practice undertaken by a group of associated doctors who work together as partners or as specialists in different areas
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of group practice1
Example Sentences
But Dr. Stringer said the key to making family medicine more attractive will be a further shift toward a model where patients deal with a group practice of physicians rather than a single doctor.
My father got a sense of this when, at one point, he joined a group practice near downtown Buffalo.
To that end, Sera and Dash have a session with Family Constellations facilitator Katarina Wittich, who performs that particular therapy, "a group practice that helps investigate what it is that's stuck in an individual's life."
And doctors joining a group practice may find that others are opposed to providing abortions at the site or don’t want the stigma and risks of doing so.
Mary Alvord, a psychologist who runs a large group practice in Maryland serving adolescents, said that many adolescents have suffered during the pandemic.
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