neglect

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neglect

 [nĕ-glekt´]
disregard of or failure to perform some task or function.
unilateral neglect
1. hemiapraxia with failure to pay attention to bodily grooming and stimuli on one side but not on the other, usually due to a lesion in the central nervous system, as after a stroke. Called also selective inattention.
2. a nursing diagnosis accepted by the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association, defined as a state in which there is a lack of awareness and attention to one side of the body.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

ne·glect

(nĕ-glĕkt'),
1. To disregard or ignore; to fail to perform a duty or to give due attention or care.
2. Lack of proper attention or care.
[L. neglego, to leave out of account, fr. nec, not, + lego, to choose]
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

neglect

Neurology Neglect syndrome The inability to perform a particular motor activity, often residual to a CVA. See Neglect patient Patient care The conscious ignoring–by a physician or other provider–of a clinical finding that might, in another setting and/or in another Pt, trigger further evaluation or therapy. See Benign neglect. Cf Negligence Psychology '…the failure of a caretaker to provide basic shelter, supervision, medical care, or support.', neglect of children or elders, a form of maltreatment, which may be linked to poverty. See Child abuse, Elder abuse, Elder neglect, Self-neglect, Willful patient neglect.
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

ne·glect

(nĕg-lekt)
1. Failure of a health care provider or caregiver to observe due care and diligence in performing services or delivering medicine or other products so as to avoid harming a patient.
2. Generally, indifference or inadequate attention to one's responsibilities in regard to self-care, care of others, or other aspects of one's personal or professional life.
3. occupational therapy The tendency to behave as if one side of the body or one side of space did not exist, with impairment of skilled or purposeful movements and visual scanning and awareness. Types of neglect include spatial, visual, and body schema (i.e., personal).
See also: hemiapraxia
[L. neglego, to leave out of account, fr. nec, not, + lego, to choose]
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

ne·glect

(nĕg-lekt)
To fail to perform a duty or give proper care.
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012
References in periodicals archive ?
Assad Madani, of Dona-|papa Pizza, in Durham City, who neglected to pay PS101 to a worker.
She said a campaign is being launched to bring all street children and neglected children to the CP&WB of Punjab government.
Welch, a pediatric psychologist and early childhood educator at Oklahoma State U., and coauthors Wilhelm and Johnson help early childhood professionals identify, prevent, and intervene in a situation where a child has been neglected. They describe types of neglect and levels of severity; risk factors; fatal neglect; red flags; assessment; the role of culture, values, and community standards; values and child neglect self-assessment; handling disclosure; making the report; prevention and intervention strategies for parents, teachers, and in the classroom; and advocating for children.
From 2000 to 2008, an average of 2.6 new drug products--including new molecular entities, vaccines, indications, combinations and formulations --were approved each year to combat neglected diseases.
Biopharmaceutical company Anacor Pharmaceuticals (NasdaqGM:ANAC) said on Monday that it has entered into a USD22.7m research agreement with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to discover drug candidates intended to treat three neglected diseases.
It is not uncommon these days to see in the news stories about child soldiers and children who have been sexually abused and neglected. Many have been left orphans.
Dubowitz, (Ed.) Neglected Children: Research, Practice and Policy.
The people at the centre of all this are the most vulnerable in our society, children who are being neglected behind closed doors.
The survey also found that 21% of parents surveyed in Wales have worried a little or a lot that their children's friends were being neglected during the summer holidays.
Peers perceive liked classmates as more sociable, less isolated and aggressive, rejected classmates as more aggressive and slightly isolated, and neglected classmates as less sociable and aggressive and more isolated than their liked counterparts, whereas controversial classmates are perceived like aggressive classmates but as being more sociable than rejected classmates (Garcia-Bacete, 2007; Jimenez, 2003; Munoz et al., 2008).
Action for Children wants to raise pounds 750,000 by the end of this year to reach out to neglected children and their families desperately needing help.