0 to spread or give out something, especially news, information, ideas, etc., to a lot of people:
One of the organization's aims is to disseminate information about the disease.
1 to spread or give out news, information, ideas, etc. to many people:
The purpose of a university press is to disseminate knowledge by publishing books and journals.
2 to spread or give out news, information, ideas, etc., to a lot of people:
Technology is changing the way in which the government gathers, stores, disseminates, and preserves documents and data.
There is no clear legal responsibility for businesses to disseminate usable information about their business.
Admittedly, medical journals are designed to disseminate novel research, not reiterate known risk factors or serve as patient education tools.
Populist strategies for disseminating scientific values clashed with control by academically educated experts.
These guidelines had been disseminated through professional society publications and communications with members.
This knowledge was disseminated through the widening realm of print media from 1850.
This review focuses on the clinical relevance of new diagnostic approaches for the identification and characterisation of individual breast cancer cells disseminated to bone marrow.
Widely disseminated images and narratives have real effects, regardless of their relationship to the technical details of the scientific work.
Sanitary health is particularly difficult to maintain, and stakes often become the means for disseminating pests and diseases.
Decades of nationalism disseminated in public addresses, political newspapers and popular histories gave the objects meaning.