0 relating to or describing people being treated for an injury or illness who are able to walk, and who, when treated in a hospital, are usually not staying for the night:
1 (of people being treated for an injury or illness) able to walk, and, when treated in a hospital, usually not staying for the night in a bed:
She is completely ambulatory and will be home today.
We will soon be opening two new ambulatory care facilities.
For ambulatory patients (children or pregnant women), teleconsultations were more costly.
Spaces such as the transept clerestories, the baptistery, and the ambulatories were coupled to the nave and risked creating delayed echoes.
One of our two patients who died suddenly underwent 48 hours of ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring.
Older adults using ambulatory aids are unable to move about as quickly as those with independent mobility.
Analysis was targeted to the sectors for ambulatory care, inpatient acute care, and rehabilitation care.
Among these are improvements in quality assurance, enhancing communication between the ambulatory and hospital sectors, and organizing a nationwide cancer registry.
The review asks if this balance is appropriate, and whether there should be a stronger focus on ambulatory or community and home-based sub-acute care.
The independent variables for the regression include home monitoring adherence, underlying disease, ambulatory diagnostic group mapping variables, transplant type, and patient demographics.