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Remedy

Remedy refers to any means of counteracting a problem, disease, or unwanted condition. In everyday language it denotes a treatment that alleviates or cures. The term originates from Latin remedium, meaning “a means of restoring health,” and entered English via Old French remede.

In medicine, a remedy is an intervention that mitigates symptoms or cures disease, ranging from traditional

In law, a remedy is a means by which a party enforces a right or compensates for

Other uses extend beyond health and law. In environmental policy, remediation or remedial actions aim to remove

See also: treatment, therapy, cure, intervention, remediation. In contemporary usage, remedy is sometimes used interchangeably with

home
remedies
to
modern
pharmaceuticals
and
surgical
procedures.
The
efficacy
and
safety
of
remedies
are
evaluated
through
scientific
research,
and
regulated
remedies
require
approval
by
authorities
before
clinical
use
or
sale.
a
wrong.
Legal
remedies
include
damages,
injunctions,
specific
performance,
rescission,
and
restitution.
Equitable
remedies
may
involve
injunctions
or
orders
directing
a
party
to
act
or
refrain
from
acting,
rather
than
monetary
compensation.
pollution
or
correct
contamination.
In
education
and
social
services,
remedial
programs
seek
to
remedy
skill
or
knowledge
gaps.
The
terms
remedy,
treatment,
and
cure
can
overlap
but
have
distinct
connotations
depending
on
context;
a
remedy
may
relieve
symptoms
or
rectify
a
problem
without
guaranteeing
a
complete
cure.
medicine
or
drug
in
everyday
speech,
though
technically
they
may
refer
to
different
concepts.