One word for life saving

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishˈlife-ˌsaving1, lifesaving /ˈlaɪfˌseɪvɪŋ/ adjective [only before noun] life-saving medical treatments or equipment are used to help save people’s liveslife-saving surgery/treatment/drugs etc The boy needs a life-saving transplant operation.

How do you know when to use a hyphen?

Hyphen Use

  1. Use a hyphen to join two or more words serving as a single adjective before a noun:
  2. Use a hyphen with compound numbers:
  3. Use a hyphen to avoid confusion or an awkward combination of letters:

Which thing is known as life-saving?

Lifesaving is the act involving rescue, resuscitation and first aid. It often refers to water safety and aquatic rescue; however, it could include ice rescue, flood and river rescue, swimming pool rescue and other emergency medical services.

Is life like hyphenated?

Hyphenation of lifelike This word can be hyphenated and contains 2 syllables as shown below.

Which are life saving drugs?

Medication Emergency Condition
Epinephrine (adrenaline) (pre-filled syringe) Treatment of anaphylactic shock (adults and children)
Glucagon Treatment of hypoglycaemia (adults and children)
Glycerol trinitrate Treatment of severe angina attack (adults)

What is another word for life saving?

What is another word for life-saving?

resuscitative resurrectional
life-restoring life-preserving
life-renewing enlivening
life-sustaining rejuvenating
revitalisingUK revitalizingUS

Does double check have a hyphen?

Double-check is a hyphenated compound word, which is a term composed of two words joined together by a hyphen. Double-check is a transitive verb, which is a verb that takes an object.

Is there a hyphen in all day?

When an adjective is used to modify another adjective rather than directly modify the noun, we hyphenate the two words. If two adjectives both modify the same noun, we normally separate them with a comma. For example, “a hot, dry day” is a day that is both hot and dry.

How can I save my life?

5 Life saving techniques that everyone should know

  1. CPR.
  2. AED use.
  3. Controlling bleeding.
  4. Heimlich maneuver.
  5. Spotting a Heart Attack or Stroke.

What’s another word for life saving?

What is another word for life-saving?

resuscitative resurrectional
life-renewing enlivening
life-sustaining rejuvenating
revitalisingUK revitalizingUS
revivifying animating

Is Lifelikeness a word?

adj. resembling or simulating real life: a lifelike portrait.

Are life-saving drugs?

Life-Saving Drugs (LSDs) are the drugs that save someone’s life, require immediate administration in most of the cases, as they sustain life, and prevent complications.

What is the most important drug?

Top 10 most important drugs in history

  1. 3 ways to make a good impression in your scientific interview. by Max Robinson.
  2. Penicillin – 1942. Penicillin was first developed in 1928, but started to be used in 1942.
  3. Insulin – 1922.
  4. Smallpox vaccine.
  5. Morphine – 1827.
  6. Aspirin – 1899.
  7. Polio vaccine.
  8. Chlorpromazine or thorazine – 1951.

What does it mean to save a life?

: to stop someone from dying or being killed If you donate blood, you might save a life.

How do you use all day in a sentence?

All-day sentence example

  1. You’ve worked all day long.
  2. He was traveling around all day and didn’t want to get his things ripped off if he left them on the back seat.
  3. He wasn’t alone all day .

What are the life saving skills?

Have a quick look at the l0 life saving skills which parents must teach their children.

  • Swimming.
  • CPR.
  • How to React to Snakebite.
  • Providing Aid for Heart Attack.
  • Controlling Bleeding.
  • Help with Choking.
  • Treating a Burn.
  • Treating Low Blood Sugar.

Are called life saving technique?

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is easy to learn the life-saving technique. It is the only known first aid and life-saving skill applied to cardiac arrest victims. CPR is known to increase the chances of survival in the victim by 50%.

How do you know if a hyphen is needed?

Generally, you need the hyphen only if the two words are functioning together as an adjective before the noun they’re describing. If the noun comes first, leave the hyphen out. This wall is load bearing. It’s impossible to eat this cake because it is rock hard.

Is life-changing hyphenated?

W. I myself would use a hyphen: ‘A life-changing event.

What are life saving skills?

Seven Basic Life Saving Skills That Everyone Should Know

  • Learning Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) –
  • Using The Automated External Defibrillator (AED) –
  • Check for Signs of Life–
  • Using The Bandage –
  • Heimlich maneuver –
  • First Aid for Burning –
  • Save from Drowning –

What is another word for life-saving?

resuscitative resurrectional
life-giving livening
regenerative reinvigorating
reviving vitalizing
vivifying activating

What is a word for a life changing moment?

What is another word for life-changing?

serious momentous
historic critical
vital eventful
pivotal monumental
of moment life-and-death

Is life changing a word?

adjective. Having such a strong effect that it changes one’s life. ‘There is nothing more life-changing than having a child.

When do you Say It is life saving without a hyphen?

And when you say you thought it was life saving without a hyphen, do you mean you thought it ought to be written as two separate words, but you heard it (as if) hyphenated in the program? – Brian Hitchcock Sep 22 ’15 at 11:10 A common use of hyphens is with words that form a compound adjective, such as, state-of-the-art, life-saving and so on.

When do you need to use a hyphen for compound words?

Most compound adjective rules are applicable only when the compound adjective precedes the term it modifies. If a compound adjective follows the term, do not use a hyphen, because relationships are sufficiently clear without one. Write most words formed with prefixes and suffixes as one word.

When do you leave the hyphen out of a sentence?

Generally, you need the hyphen only if the two words are functioning together as an adjective before the noun they’re describing. If the noun comes first, leave the hyphen out.

When do you use a hyphen for a modifier?

When a modifier consists of two words that join together to describe a noun, you need to use a hyphen. There are a few key things to keep in mind here: The two-word modifier needs to come before the noun. Both words need to function together to describe the noun. Neither word should be an adverb ending in “ly.”

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A drop of encouragement may seem like a drop in the ocean, but sometimes it can save a life from drowning in sadness.

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It’s not often that a single word saves lives. But when a member of the public approached Professor Martin Thornhill to understand how a heart infection had taken her partner’s life, the two of them instigated a small but transformative and potentially life-saving change to UK dental practice.

Ash Frisby lost her husband Myles to Infective Endocarditis (IE). During a routine dental procedure in October 2014, he became infected when bacteria from the mouth escaped into his bloodstream.

Myles had a replacement heart valve which put him at high risk of this fatal infection. Two weeks later the flu-like symptoms of endocarditis began. But with no knowledge of IE Myles and Ash thought nothing of it. Over the weeks that followed, his condition worsened with the development of a high temperature and overwhelming fatigue, but it wasn’t until 10 days before his death, in December 2014, that he was diagnosed with IE.  

No-one expects to die from a routine visit to the dentist. The remit of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) is to improve health outcomes for those using the NHS services and develop clinical guidelines for doctors, dentists and health professionals. These guidelines serve as an important resource for all health practitioners who use them to inform best clinical practice. Infective Endocarditis (IE) can be fatal. And for a significant minority of people it can happen simply as a result of visiting the dentist. But in 2008 the lack of evidence on the effectiveness of antibiotic prophylaxis (AP) as a preventative measure for patients at risk of IE, led NICE to change the guidelines on the use of AP. Prior to 2008 guidelines had encouraged the prescription of antibiotic prophylaxis before dental treatments, however the change was a recommendation not to prescribe.  

These were the guidelines that Myles’ dentist followed during his treatment. But when Professor Martin Thornhill first embarked on a study into the impact of the guideline change it wasn’t thought of as controversial. “Before we set out to do the research we actually thought that the NICE guidelines were correct and that antibiotic prophylaxis was unnecessary to prevent infective endocarditis,” Martin explains.

However, what Martin and his team discovered surprised them. Published in The Lancet in 2015, their study identified a significant rise in the number of people being diagnosed with IE following the guideline revision. This was alongside a large fall in the prescribing of antibiotic prophylaxis to patients at high risk of IE. By March 2013 this rise was accounting for an additional 35 cases in the UK per month.

Ash came across Professor Thornhill’s report whilst doing her own research into IE. She rang Martin and explained what had happened to Myles, telling him how her husband had previously been prescribed AP before dental treatment pre 2008. Following this, on one occasion when he had his teeth scaled without AP, he developed IE.  

Before Ash contacted him Martin had already presented his findings to NICE. But the response of the general public moved the academic to re-engage with the issue. “In all honesty, it was the stories that I heard from patients and their families after we published the Lancet paper in 2015, that made us realise the importance of our data…” Martin said.

Martin helped Ash to construct a letter to Andrew Dillion, the Chief Executive of NICE, in the hope of persuading a guideline revision. Her letter highlighted the human cost of the guideline, supported by scientific understanding provided by Martin. Alongside this, Martin and his team produced an opinion piece in the British Dental Journal, the most read dental journal in the UK, in 2016. They pointed out that, from an expert perspective, the risk of not giving antibiotics to patients at high risk of IE was far more damaging than previously presumed. This and a second opinion piece from Martin on IE were voted as the top two papers published in the journal in 2016. “Without Martin and his work, my communication with NICE would have accomplished very little” said Ash.

The partnership of Ash’s human story and Martin’s academic study was able to achieve something that wouldn’t have been possible individually. NICE inserted the word ‘routinely’ into the guideline, so it now reads ‘Antibiotic prophylaxis against infective endocarditis is not recommended routinely’.

NICE highlighted that, “This amendment should now make clear that in individual cases, antibiotic prophylaxis may be appropriate…” This single word was, in Martin’s words ‘a major breakthrough’. Before ‘routinely’ was added, dentists were not allowed to prescribe antibiotics to patients at risk of IE prior to dental procedures. But now, if the dentist feels it’s necessary, if for example their patient is at very high risk of IE, they can make their own judgement and prescribe the potentially life-saving antibiotics.

So why are patients still not being prescribed AP? Simply put, their dentists don’t know about it. Ten years after the initial NICE guideline change, we have an entire generation of dentists who have no knowledge of its historic existence, let alone the controversies at play. Little has been done to publicise or clarify the advice, leaving those who are in the know in a state of confusion. “By introducing the word ‘routinely’ into the guidance, [NICE] removed the absolute rigidity of the guidance without clarifying how and when patients should receive AP. In the process they made the whole situation even more confusing for clinicians and patients alike,” said Martin.

News about the guideline review ignited interest from dental practitioners and cardiologists alike. “Universally, there is a very high interest in this topic and practitioners are keen to know as much as possible so that they do the best thing for their patients” says Martin.

But speculation leads to uncertainty. For Ash and Martin this cast an unnerving shadow over their progress which had the potential to render their efforts worthless. Many of those at risk of IE are not made aware of the complications of getting the infection nor the symptoms to look out for. Neither are they aware of the risk of infection presented by dental procedures. Had her husband been aware of these, Ash said he would have been better placed to ask his GP the right questions which might have resulted in a different, less tragic outcome.

This has directed Martin’s focus in the last few years, telling us, “people who’ve had dental procedures should be warned of the symptoms to look out for then more people might survive”. He’s now been around the world attempting to illustrate the personal cost and impact of IE and what clinicians can do to prevent it and diagnose it early. He’s spoken at international meetings of infectious disease experts and dentists, given lectures at the British Society of Endodontics and the British Society for Oral Surgeons, and spoken at cardiology meetings in the UK. Martin’s also investing time in a campaign for patients at risk of IE to be advised about the risk and be warned of the symptoms to look out for.

Through Martin and Ash’s work, dentists and cardiologists have become unified in their approach to infective endocarditis. In Martin’s eyes, “In some ways patients are in a better position to bring about change than researchers”.

Exceptional research is the backbone required to impact change but sometimes it needs a catalyst. For Martin, Ash was that catalyst and with more partnerships like this, we can have an even greater impact.

Filling the gap with the Scottish Dental Clinical Effectiveness Program

Without Martin’s work there would be little guidance for dentists about how to implement the guideline review. But what’s been done to formally fill the gap left by the change?

In Scotland, guidance to provide high quality dental care is governed slightly differently to the UK. The Scottish Dental Clinical Effectiveness Program (SDCEP) provides advice designed to support dentists in providing high quality patient care. They’ve worked on the basis of Martin’s research and publications to fill the gap left behind by the guideline review.

Martin and his team published articles in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) and the British Dental Journal (BDJ) explaining what dentists should do in the light of uncertainty surrounding the guideline review. This provided the foundations for the SDCEP to formally issue similar advice to dentists on how the NICE guidelines should be implemented in clinical practice. Essentially advising dentists to give antibiotic prophylaxis to those at high risk, much like the American and European guidelines do.

Although originating in Scotland the advice itself has now been adopted nationally and approved by NICE themselves. Jeremy Bagg, the Chair for the Steering Group of the SDCEP has highlighted the “significant impact” that Martin and his collaborators, including Ash, have had in the development of these guidelines. This impact comes from a greater certainty for dentists about when to give antibiotic prophylaxis to patients which will ultimately have cost- and life-saving benefits.

Further information


Relevant publications

Incidence of infective endocarditis in england, 2000-12: a secular trend, interrupted time-series analysis

Antibiotic prophylaxis and incidence of endocarditis before and after the 2007 AHA recommendations

Guidelines on prophylaxis to prevent infective endocarditis (2016)

Study authors call on NICE to change guidelines on antibiotic prophylaxis


Funders, awards and key grants

November 2014 and September 2015: Heart Research UK and Simply Health 
September 2016: Heart Research UK
December 2016: Heart Research UK and The US National Institutes for Health
November 2018: Delta Dental of Michigan and its Research and Data Institute


Related teaching

Bachelor of Dental Surgery

Dental Hygiene and Dental Therapy

Doctorate in Clinical Dentistry


Research profiles

British society for oral medicine

Sheffield University Martin Thornhill


For more information please contact: 

Alicia Shephard
Research Marketing and Content Coordinator 
University of Sheffield
+44 114 222 1033
alicia.shephard@sheffield.ac.uk

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As I prepare for my second term as Secretary-General, I am thinking hard about how we can meet the expectations of the millions of people who see the U.N.’s blue flag as a banner of hope. We have to continue our life-saving work in peacekeeping, human rights, development and humanitarian relief.

Ban Ki-moon

section

PRONUNCIATION OF LIFE-SAVING

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GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF LIFE-SAVING

Life-Saving can act as a noun and an adjective.

A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.

The adjective is the word that accompanies the noun to determine or qualify it.

WHAT DOES LIFE-SAVING MEAN IN ENGLISH?

life-saving

Lifesaving

Lifesaving is the act involving rescue, resuscitation and first aid. It often refers to water safety and aquatic rescue however it could include ice rescue, flood and river rescue, swimming pool rescue and other emergency medical services. Lifesaving also refers to sport where lifesavers compete skills, speed and team work. Lifesaving activities specialized in oceanic environment is called surf lifesaving or coastal lifesaving. Those who participate in lifesaving activities as a volunteer are called lifesavers, and those who are employed to perform lifesaving activities are called lifeguards.


Definition of life-saving in the English dictionary

The first definition of life-saving in the dictionary is acting to save a person’s life. Other definition of life-saving is giving help in time of need. Life-Saving is also the practice or techniques of saving people’s lives.

Synonyms and antonyms of life-saving in the English dictionary of synonyms

Translation of «life-saving» into 25 languages

online translator

TRANSLATION OF LIFE-SAVING

Find out the translation of life-saving to 25 languages with our English multilingual translator.

The translations of life-saving from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «life-saving» in English.

Translator English — Chinese


救生的

1,325 millions of speakers

Translator English — Spanish


que salva vidas

570 millions of speakers

Translator English — Hindi


जीवन रक्षक

380 millions of speakers

Translator English — Arabic


مُنْقِذٌ لِلحَيَاة

280 millions of speakers

Translator English — Russian


спасательный

278 millions of speakers

Translator English — Portuguese


salva-vida

270 millions of speakers

Translator English — Bengali


জীবন রক্ষাকারী

260 millions of speakers

Translator English — French


de sauvetage

220 millions of speakers

Translator English — Malay


menyelamatkan nyawa

190 millions of speakers

Translator English — German


lebensrettend

180 millions of speakers

Translator English — Japanese


救命の

130 millions of speakers

Translator English — Korean


생명을 구해주는

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Javanese


Hemat energi

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Vietnamese


cứu mạng

80 millions of speakers

Translator English — Tamil


உயிரைக் காப்பாற்றும்

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Marathi


जीवनसत्त्वे

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Turkish


hayat kurtarma

70 millions of speakers

Translator English — Italian


salvavita

65 millions of speakers

Translator English — Polish


ratowniczy

50 millions of speakers

Translator English — Ukrainian


такий, що рятує життя

40 millions of speakers

Translator English — Romanian


salvator

30 millions of speakers

Translator English — Greek


σωστικός

15 millions of speakers

Translator English — Afrikaans


lewensreddende

14 millions of speakers

Translator English — Swedish


livräddnings–

10 millions of speakers

Translator English — Norwegian


livreddende

5 millions of speakers

Trends of use of life-saving

TENDENCIES OF USE OF THE TERM «LIFE-SAVING»

The term «life-saving» is quite widely used and occupies the 32.134 position in our list of most widely used terms in the English dictionary.

Trends

FREQUENCY

Quite widely used

The map shown above gives the frequency of use of the term «life-saving» in the different countries.

Principal search tendencies and common uses of life-saving

List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «life-saving».

FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «LIFE-SAVING» OVER TIME

The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «life-saving» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «life-saving» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.

Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about life-saving

10 QUOTES WITH «LIFE-SAVING»

Famous quotes and sentences with the word life-saving.

I continue to be a strong believer in the life-saving importance of early detection, and I encourage everyone to be proactive about their preventive screenings.

Our role is to develop techniques that allow us to provide emergency life-saving procedures to injured patients in an extreme, remote environment without the presence of a physician.

First we attacked the Russian soldiers with our gases, and then when we saw the poor fellows lying there, dying slowly, we tried to make breathing easier for them by using our own life-saving devices on them.

I believe that life-saving, essential drugs should be freely available and the innovator should be paid a suitable royalty payment for his invention.

I cannot be alone in being pretty nauseated by Red Nose Day, or at least its television manifestation. Do I think that wretchedly poor children in Africa should get food and life-saving drugs? Of course. Do I want to be hectored into contributing by celebrities who earn more in a 10-minute slot than many of these families get in a year? Nope.

Millions of American families affected by debilitating diseases have new hope today after the U.S. House passed legislation to support potentially life-saving stem cell research.

As I prepare for my second term as Secretary-General, I am thinking hard about how we can meet the expectations of the millions of people who see the U.N.’s blue flag as a banner of hope. We have to continue our life-saving work in peacekeeping, human rights, development and humanitarian relief.

No: war material is life-saving for one’s own people and whoever works and performs in these spheres can be proud of it; here enterprise as a whole finds its highest justification of existence.

Post-operatively the transplanted kidney functioned immediately with a dramatic improvement in the patient’s renal and cardiopulmonary status. This spectacular success was a clear demonstration that organ transplantation could be life-saving.

Besides my love for horses and cars, I am passionate about making the cheapest vaccines in the world. I started making life-saving drugs when I was 22.

10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «LIFE-SAVING»

Discover the use of life-saving in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to life-saving and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.

1

Life Saving Skills Manual: Essential Obstetric Care

The Life Saving Skills Manual accompanies the Life Saving Skills — Essential Obstetric Care and Newborn Care course, which is structured around the leading causes of maternal mortality and the delivery of basic and comprehensive emergency …

Nynke Van Den Broek, 2006

2

Life Saving Drugs: The Elusive Magic Bullet

This book describes the discovery and development of antibacterial, anti-viral and anti-cancer drugs and highlights the colourful characters behind their inventions.

3

Unlocking the Mysteries of Eating Disorders: A LifeSaving

The book includes the widest range of professional care options available, both psychotherapeutic and medicinal, as well as preventive solutions for children who display early warning signs.

David Herzog, Debra Franko, Patti Cable, 2007

4

Annual Report of the United States LifeSaving Service

This unexpended balance of $70,156.61 was carried to the surplus fund June 30,
1911. At the beginning of the fiscal year there was on hand available from the
appropriation “Rebuilding and improving life-saving stations (proceeds of sales)”
 …

United States. Life-Saving Service, 1912

5

Survey of Lifesaving Appliances and Arrangements: Course + …

The requirements for emergency lighting which concern life-saving arrangements
and which should be checked during surveys should be covered. The public
address system and general alarm system should be tested for audibility and
their …

International Maritime Organization, 2004

6

Lighthouses and LifeSaving on the Oregon Coast

Clearly this was not an auspicious beginning to the history of the U.S. Lighthouse
Service in Oregon. The U.S. Life-Saving Service had equally humble beginnings.
In 1878, the first life-saving station was erected at Cape Arago. A single keeper …

7

Annual Report of the Operations of the United States …

At the beginning of the fiscal year there was available from the appropriation “Site
, Long Branch Life-Saving Station,” $13,946.24, and as there were no
expenditures during the year from this appropriation, the balance on hand June
30, 1898, …

United States. Life-Saving Service, 1899

8

United States LifeSaving Service in Michigan

the USRCS and became the modern entity we know as the United States Coast
Guard (USCG). The following photos document the activities and efforts of the
USLSS and early Coast Guard in Michigan. The Life-Saving Service operated
along …

William D. Peterson, 2000

9

Lighthouses and Life Saving Along the Connecticut and Rhode …

Four. THE. U.S.. LIFE-SAVING. SERVICE. One of the worst gales ever to sweep
the Rhode Island coast occurred in the late spring of 1909. Blowing from the west
-southwest, the storm kicked up tremendous seas that sent combers rolling in on
 …

10

LifeSaving Appliances Training Manual

2.0. Dette. kapitel. 2. 1 Ruller — hvem gør hvad 2.2 Alarmsignaler Her får du et
overblik over, hvad du skal kende til og foretage dig fra det øjeblik, ulykken
indtræffer, og indtil det eventuelt besluttes at forlade skibet. Det er svært at sætte
sig ind i, …

Søfartsstyrelsen, Danish Maritime Authority, 2007

10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «LIFE-SAVING»

Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term life-saving is used in the context of the following news items.

Report: Life-Saving Breast Cancer Drugs Going Untaken in Appalac …

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., July 20, 2015 – Nearly a third of breast cancer survivors in Appalachia are not taking the critical, potentially … «NBC 29 News, Jul 15»

New state regulations slow access to life-saving overdose drug …

Jeanne Block, a nurse working with the New Mexico Department of Health, shows a heroin user in Española how to use Narcan, or naloxone, … «Santa Fe New Mexican, Jul 15»

New rules slow access to life-saving overdose drug

Jeanne Block, a nurse working with the New Mexico Department of Health, shows a heroin user in Española how to use Narcan, or naloxone, … «Santa Fe New Mexican, Jul 15»

Cancer survivor Rik urges people to become life-saving donors …

Cancer survivor Rik urges people to become life-saving donors. By Ciaranfagan | Posted: July 20, 2015. Rik with the flag which will be passed from host to host. «Leicester Mercury, Jul 15»

Life-saving device installed in Oxted | Surrey Mirror

Life-saving device installed in Oxted. By Surrey Mirror | Posted: July 20, 2015. LIFE-SAVING DEVICE: Commander Chris Evans with the new defibrillator. «Surrey Mirror, Jul 15»

Duke flies four life-saving ambulance missions in first week — BT

… ambulance missions in first week. The Duke of Cambridge flew on four life-saving missions during his first week as an air ambulance pilot. 0 … «BT Sport, Jul 15»

Life saving gift from Rotary — Bexhill Observer

A potentially life-saving device has been installed in the heart of Little Common. The Rotary Club of Senlac has donated a second Public … «Bexhill Observer, Jul 15»

Life-saving breast cancer drugs going untaken in Appalachia …

Nearly a third of breast cancer survivors in Appalachia are not taking the critical, potentially life-saving follow-up treatment — despite having … «EurekAlert, Jul 15»

A life-saving service to fly patients to hospital — The Irish Times

The establishment of a permanent Emergency Aeromedical Support (EAS) service is a most welcome development. Operated by the Air Corps … «Irish Times, Jul 15»

Cambodia uses ‘life-saving‘ rats to sniff out deadly landmines …

«These are life-saving rats,» he said under rainy skies. Their work could prove vital in a country where unexploded devices, including mines and … «The Star Online, Jul 15»

REFERENCE

« EDUCALINGO. Life-Saving [online]. Available <https://educalingo.com/en/dic-en/life-saving>. Apr 2023 ».

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