0 in a way that is extremely important, or necessary for the success or continued existence of something: --
1 energetically, or in a way that is full of life: --
Therefore, efforts to preserve trust in an era of managed care are vitally important.
An increased understanding, based on empirical research, of the life situations of this age group could make a vitally important contribution to intervention strategies.
Vitally, they limit spatial leakage from beyond the organ and around the altar.
As we have seen, women's incorporation in men through marriage was deemed to be vitally important because of their perceived incapacities.
High and low politics are defined by the extent to which states believe their interests are vitally affected by the decisions of other states.
The success of management policies depends vitally on how they are developed and implemented.
Nevertheless, coal remained vitally important for the ironmasters as they used the coal reserves they controlled to cross-subsidize their increasingly uncompetitive smelting operations.
Nonetheless, the passion and indignation of its author put a vitally important moral issue before us.