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community networks Organizations and individuals cooperating together toward a common goal at the local or grassroots level.
(12 Dec 1998)
community nurse A nurse who provides care to individuals or groups in a community outside of institutions. Usually works through the auspices of a state or city health department.
Synonym: community health nurse, community nurse.
(05 Mar 2000)
community pharmacy services Total pharmaceutical services provided to the public through community pharmacies.
(12 Dec 1998)
community psychiatry Branch of psychiatry concerned with the provision and delivery of a coordinated program of mental health care to a specified population. The foci included in this concept are: all social, psychological and physical factors related to aetiology, prevention, and maintaining positive mental health in the community.
(12 Dec 1998)
community psychology The application of psychology to community programs, e.g., in the schools, correctional and welfare systems, and community mental health centres.
(05 Mar 2000)
plant community <botany, ecology> The plant populations existing in a shared habitat or environment.
(31 Dec 1997)
hospitals, community Institutions with permanent facilities and organised medical staff which provide the full range of hospital services primarily to a neighborhood area.
(12 Dec 1998)
therapeutic community Psychotherapeutic technique which emphasizes socioenvironmental and interpersonal influences in the resocialization and rehabilitation of the patient. The setting is usually a hospital unit or ward in which professional and nonprofessional staff interact with the patients.
(12 Dec 1998)
edaphic community A community of plants which results from or is influenced by factors about the soil, for example amount of drainage, level of salinity (salt concentration), or amount of sediment movement. Marsh environments often have edaphic communities of plants specially adapted to marsh conditions.
(09 Oct 1997)
acquired immunity <immunology> A form of cellular defense which identifies certain foreign substances (antigens) as harmful to the body. For this reason, the body can acquire resistance to a particular foreign agent.
These foreign agents are then attacked by sensitised T lymphocytes (cellular immunity). White blood cells, plasma cells, B lymphocytes and other specialised immune system cells act in concert with T lymphocytes to produce antibodies (humoral immunity) that attach to the antigen directing T-cells to attack.
Antibodies also stimulate the release of special chemical mediators in the blood (for example complement, interferon) that further enhance antigen destruction.
(13 Nov 1997)
active immunity <immunology> An organisms resistance to disease or infection, developed because the organisms immune system has produced antibodies after an infection or innoculation.
(06 May 1997)
adoptive immunity <immunology> Immunity to disease or infection conferred on a previously non-immune individual by transferring lymphocytes from a previously immune individual to the non-immune individual.
(15 Jan 1998)
allograft immunity <immunology> The recipient's immune system rejects tissue grafted from a genetically dissimilar donor (of the same species) and stages an immune attack against it.
(09 Oct 1997)
antiviral immunity Immunity resulting from virus infection, either naturally acquired or produced by intentional vaccination; compared to some bacterial immunity's, it is of relatively long duration, but this may be the result of infection-immunity rather than being peculiar to virus infection per se, since it occurs also in bacterial immunity after infections such as typhoid fever.
(05 Mar 2000)
artificial active immunity See: acquired immunity.
(05 Mar 2000)
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