Adjective ambulatory theatrical companies that brought live theater to small towns across America

Recent Examples on the Web: Adjective

My former college boyfriend (from 1972-1975) is now 78 years old and, although still ambulatory, is in poor health requiring 24-hour professional care. Amy Dickinson, Detroit Free Press, "Old love letters don’t age so well," 9 Sep. 2020

My former college boyfriend (from 1972-1975) is now 78 years old and, although still ambulatory, is in poor health requiring 24-hour professional care. Amy Dickinson, oregonlive, "Ask Amy: Old love letters, not so forgotten, may slip into the wrong hands," 8 Sep. 2020

My former college boyfriend (from 1972-1975) is now 78 years old and, although still ambulatory, is in poor health requiring 24-hour professional care. Amy Dickinson, Star Tribune, "Ask Amy: Old flame won't return love letters," 7 Sep. 2020

The Joint Commission accredits and certifies more than 22,000 health-care organizations and programs in the United States, from hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers to home health-care agencies and nursing homes. Christine Sexton, sun-sentinel.com, "COVID-19 makes it hard to inspect nursing homes," 6 Sep. 2020

The Joint Commission accredits and certifies more than 22,000 health-care organizations and programs in the United States, from hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers to home health-care agencies and nursing homes. Christine Sexton, orlandosentinel.com, "COVID-19 makes nursing home health inspections tough to accomplish," 4 Sep. 2020

Myers developed an acuity tool for the ambulatory oncology infusion center to evenly distribute patients among nurses, with a goal for each nurse to treat 10 to 14 patients per day. Evan Macdonald, cleveland, "Case Western student’s winning design highlights inaugural UH Nursing Research and Innovation Day," 28 Aug. 2020

With the decline, Memorial resumed elective, short stay and ambulatory procedures again. Cindy Krischer Goodman, sun-sentinel.com, "Florida’s hospitals show signs that coronavirus may be waning. For now, at least," 12 Aug. 2020

In the study of ambulatory Covid-19 patients, REGN-COV2 is designed to speed recovery and prevent the disease from getting worse. Matthew Herper, STAT, "Antibody drugs could be one of the best weapons against Covid-19. But will they matter?," 11 Aug. 2020

Recent Examples on the Web: Noun

Last week, the pediatric ambulatory department at Boston Medical Center, which treats nearly 15,000 children, began sending vaccination mobile units into city neighborhoods. Jan Hoffman, New York Times, "Vaccine Rates Drop Dangerously as Parents Avoid Doctor’s Visits," 23 Apr. 2020

The site is Virtua’s third ambulatory COVID-19 testing site beyond its testing at its five hospitals and seven emergency rooms in South Jersey. David Levinsky, USA TODAY, "Virtua tests about 100 for coronavirus on first day at Willingboro site," 22 Apr. 2020

Patients who are ambulatory and can walk themselves will naturally need a different level of attention than someone who is in critical care. Rob Verger, Popular Science, "First mission for the Air Force’s flying hospital pods: Pulling COVID-19 patients from Afghanistan," 14 Apr. 2020

The most common type of disability was ambulatory at 7.9%, where people have difficulty performing activities such as walking or climbing stairs. Micah Walker, Detroit Free Press, "Michigan board was mysteriously abolished — and he's fighting to bring it back," 18 Jan. 2020

Its argument was that the nine ambulatory surgery centers already in Northern Kentucky had plenty of capacity. Anne Saker, Cincinnati.com, "Christ Hospital walks away from all its plans at Drawbridge Inn in Fort Mitchell," 26 Nov. 2019

Newton-Wellesley also runs a 10-year-old breast-feeding support group that meets at its nearby ambulatory care center. John Laidler, BostonGlobe.com, "Newton-Wellesley hospital installs ‘pod’ for breast-feeding women," 31 July 2019

Many of those patients are non-ambulatory, have seizure disorders, behavior problems, mental illness, visual or hearing impairments, or a combination and all must qualify financially for Medicaid assistance. Stephanie Innes, azcentral, "Hacienda HealthCare to lose Medicaid contract after report of maggots found on patient," 20 June 2019

Construction on the cathedral began in 1160 under France's Bishop Maurice de Sully, beginning with the church's choir and ambulatories, at the end of the structure close to the altar. Hadley Keller, House Beautiful, "Notre Dame: An In-Depth Look at What Was Lost and What it Will Take to Rebuild," 16 Apr. 2019

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'ambulatory.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.