0 a set of doors that you go through by pushing them around in a circle
1 a set of doors that you go through by pushing them around in a circle
2 a situation in which a lot of different people do a particular job or work for a particular company for a short time and then leave:
The revolving door between nursing homes and acute care means that such increase inevitably reaches high risk hospitalized patients.
We wanted to stop the revolving door and have a one-door approach.
That will create a revolving door of people going in and out of subsidised employment.
We must deal with what is often described as the "revolving door syndrome".
One knows what happens when too many people go through a revolving door.
I quote from paragraph 4.16 on page 13, which deals with the problem of the "revolving door" patient.
The trouble is that we are involved in a revolving door argument.
A revolving door had been established that was keeping people out of the unemployment figures, but they were not being provided with long-term work.