Curative care, also called curative medicine, health care traditionally oriented towards seeking a cure for an existent disease or medical condition
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Curative petition, a legal petition specific to the India justice system that is a final remedy after the dismissal of a review petition by the Supreme Court of India
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Corrective rape, also called curative rape, a criminal practice, whereby homosexual women and men are raped by persons of the opposite sex to turn them heterosexual
On January 31, 2014 Supreme Court of India issued notice to Central Government on Bhullar's curative plea seeking commuting his death sentence to life imprisonment.
However, he died before his consecration during a curative stay in the Black Forest spa town of Lauterbach.
The drillers were disappointed, but, under scientific analysis, the water proved to have greater curative powers than those found at the Nauheim Springs in Germany, the leading spa of the day.
In the 1920s he visited Doctor's Cave Beach Club in Montego Bay, Jamaica, and was most impressed by the curative powers of the waters.
Salts from the mineral springs were marketed by Carr Collins, Sr. as Crazy Crystals in the 1930s as having curative powers, but their sale was then suppressed by the Food and Drug Administration.
The work received the name of Banister's Breviary of the Eyes in which the curative properties of Malvern water are also mentioned.
CEM Joad wrote in The New Statesman and Society that although the book was a mine of learning and the commentary was profound, readers would be surprised to find that Huxley had adopted a series of peculiar beliefs such as the curative power of relics and spiritual presences incarnated in sacramental objects.