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interventive

Interventive is an English adjective derived from intervene, formed with the suffix -ive, and used to describe action, measures, or processes that involve intervention. The sense centers on intervening in a situation to affect its outcome, often by deliberate or proactive means. The term is general enough to apply across domains where intervention is a key feature, including social, political, and medical contexts.

In usage, interventive is less common than interventional in contemporary medical writing, where the preferred term

Common collocations include interventive measures, interventive policies, and interventive therapies, all signaling actions intended to alter

See also: intervention, interventional, interventionism. In medical contexts, related fields include interventional radiology and interventional cardiology,

typically
denotes
procedures
that
actively
intervene
in
a
patient’s
physiology
or
anatomy.
Nevertheless,
interventive
can
appear
in
formal
prose
to
emphasize
the
act
of
intervening
itself
or
to
describe
interventions
in
a
broader
sense
beyond
a
specific
technique.
The
nuance
often
hinges
on
whether
the
emphasis
is
on
the
act
of
intervening
(interventive)
versus
the
method
or
procedure
used
(interventional).
a
system
or
outcome.
The
term
may
carry
connotations
of
proactive
or
interventionist
approaches,
depending
on
the
context
and
authorial
intent.
which
use
imaging-guided
techniques
to
perform
procedures
that
intervene
in
a
patient’s
condition.
While
related,
those
terms
reflect
more
specific
usage
within
medicine,
whereas
interventive
remains
a
broader
adjective
describing
the
act
or
possibility
of
intervention.