Preventative in a sentence as a noun

In terms of preventative medicine, just getting them to use it can be quite a chore.

Standard procedure is to copy any drive you can get your hands on before seeing what's on it, to stop preventative measures like this.

Lots of preventative medicine doesn't save either lives or money - mammograms below age 50 are a good example.

This touches on some very deep problems in our society and its views on preventative health, mostly that we don't take it seriously.

Money on lawyers and PR are only spent when there's a known threat whereas preventative security is successful when nothing happens.

Meanwhile, little preventative measures like not leaving them outside are cheaper than putting them in little baby Faraday cages on cloudy days.

There are good preventative *****, but it's highly doubtful any medication could actually restore dead follicles in humans.

How do you get people to acknowledge the eventual death of their beloved elderly and push them to be proactive in taking preventative measures without using scare tactics?

Preventative in a sentence as an adjective

We shouldn't be discouraging younger workers from getting preventative care so they can stay healthy and keep contributing to the economy.

Just think: A life without the damage wrought by modern antibiotics, dentistry, surgery, and preventative medicine!

A preventative therapeutic regimen for treating obesity at a genetic level is discovered5.

You don't need to even use the ACC, people for get that the 2005 counter-terrorism act[0][1] has provision for preventative detention without charge, and notably, made it a criminal act to tell anyone that you had been detained.

Talk to any soldier about this and they will acknowledge that america's security is not directly threatened in todays world, and believe that the military mostly acts as a "preventative force" to keep it that way.

Of your insurer only needs you to be healthy until you find a new job, there's not much in incentive for long-term healthcare and preventative screenings to identify tumors and other problems before they become an expensive problem.

What's interesting in your case, and particularly frightening, is that any preventative care or examination is actually forbidden, which is the most counter-productive possible choice both for your health and the cost of maintaining it in the long term.

Yes, there absolutely are policies that encourage people to climb to a perch from which it is incredibly easy to fall: social pressure against out-of-wedlock births; ineffective sexual education; social stigma against and a lack of services providing female reproductive health in general, contraceptives, emergency contraceptives and abortion; the structure of our health system disincentivizing preventative medical care in general; bankruptcy 'reform'; predatory lending practices; social stigma against the trades; corporate abuse of the safety net to depress wages; college grants and their unregulated effect on tuition; the college loan system in general; regressive taxation; child tax credits; safety net rewards based on family size; the jarring transition between qualifying for social safety net programs and not qualifying; military rewards based on family size; subsidized sprawl and a lack of public transportation; zero-tolerance laws and policies; substandard school districts; etc.

Preventative definitions

noun

remedy that prevents or slows the course of an illness or disease; "the doctor recommended several preventatives"

See also: preventive prophylactic

noun

any obstruction that impedes or is burdensome

See also: hindrance hinderance hitch preventive encumbrance incumbrance interference

noun

an agent or device intended to prevent conception

See also: contraceptive preventive

adjective

tending to prevent or hinder

See also: preventive

adjective

preventing or contributing to the prevention of disease; "preventive medicine"; "vaccines are prophylactic"; "a prophylactic drug"

See also: preventive prophylactic