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Curative

Curative is an adjective used to describe something capable of curing a disease or condition, resulting in complete resolution rather than mere management. Etymology traces to Latin curare, "to care for" or "to heal."

In medicine, curative interventions aim to remove disease or restore health to a state free of pathology.

In clinical research and pharmacology, "curative" describes therapies with the potential to eliminate disease or achieve

Beyond medicine, curative can describe remedies or measures that heal or rectify problems, such as policies

As a proper noun, Curative is used as a brand name by various organizations, most notably in

Examples
include
surgical
removal
of
malignant
tumors,
antibiotic
therapy
for
bacterial
infections,
and
certain
curative
radiotherapy
or
chemotherapy
regimens.
The
term
is
often
used
in
treatment
planning
as
"curative
intent"
when
a
patient's
goal
is
cure
rather
than
palliation
or
control.
However,
the
success
and
durability
of
a
cure
vary
by
disease,
stage,
and
patient
factors.
long-term
remission
without
ongoing
treatment.
The
concept
of
cure
is
complex;
in
many
areas,
durable
remission
for
a
defined
period
is
used
as
a
surrogate
for
cure,
and
guidelines
may
specify
criteria
for
declaring
a
cure.
or
procedures
designed
to
cure
defects
in
systems,
laws,
or
processes.
In
legal
and
administrative
contexts,
"curative"
denotes
actions
intended
to
remedy
procedural
deficiencies
(curative
provisions,
curative
amendments).
the
healthcare
sector
for
companies
operating
diagnostic
or
therapeutic
services.
This
article
covers
the
term
in
general;
for
a
specific
organization
named
Curative,
consult
its
dedicated
article.
See
also
cure,
curative
care,
and
cure
rates.