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The phrase "acute dependency" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a strong or intense reliance on something, often in contexts related to psychology, health, or technology.
Example: "The patient exhibited an acute dependency on pain medication, requiring careful monitoring by the healthcare team."
Alternatives: "severe reliance" or "intense dependence."
Exact(1)
Functional decline creates acute dependency (sudden need for increased human help) and makes discharge difficult [ 32].
Similar(59)
Biological systems are characterized by complex spatial structure, low diffusion rates, or entail acute spatial dependencies, requiring spatially resolved simulations.
Prevalence is so high that specific provision seems required to manage the combined impact of acute illness, physical dependency and behavioural and psychiatric symptoms if we are to minimise the risk of poor outcomes, and dissatisfaction with care.
In principle, we broke down drug harms into the following parameters: physical harm (acute, chronic and intravenous), dependency (intensity of pleasure, psychological dependence, physical dependence), and social harms (intoxication, other social harms and health-care costs).
Others say they did, but at an extreme cost, including acute side effects, crippling dependency or addiction.
"It's like they've got a dependency on acute care.
He earned a BA in Psych in 1991 and worked in chemical dependency and acute psychiatric care facilities during college.
Many postoperative surgical patients require higher levels of care than level 0, and while most acute hospitals have High Dependency and Intensive Care (level 2 and 3) facilities, few have level 1 care environments.
Glomerular permeability to albumin is highly dependent on NO [ 10], which led us to explore the effect of paricalcitol on renal NO dependency by acute infusion of L-NMMA, a non-selective NOS inhibitor.
Chemical reactions inside cells have long been correctly described as both discrete and stochastic [ 1- 3], often entailing acute spatial patterns or dependencies [ 4- 6].
Of the patients studied, 6.8% had adjustment disorders, 6.4% specific phobia, 5.7% generalised anxiety disorders, 5.1% alcohol dependencies, 4.2% posttraumatic stress diseases, 3.6% (legal) drug dependencies, 1.5% (illegal) drug dependencies, 3.0% acute stress reactions, 2.9% panic disorders and 0.6% social phobia.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com