Advertisement
Advertisement
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
Word 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.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse