What's the difference between deliverer and rescuer?
Deliverer
Definition:
(n.) One who delivers or rescues; a preserver.
(n.) One who relates or communicates.
Example Sentences:
(1) "We are uncertain of the structure, deliverability and conditionality of what is proposed by Moelis, but we are willing to engage with them to investigate further.
(2) The treatments were equally deliverable, with 76% of patients completing their allocated regimen.
(3) Surgical resection of regional lymph nodes and renal vein thrombus, if present, is recommended, since the deliverance of full radiation doses is not likely without exceeding tolerance of vital normal tissues.
(4) Compared to Heathrow we are cheaper, quicker, have a significantly lower environmental impact and we are the most deliverable solution."
(5) There are some very serious question marks about whether others will ever really happen in practice and whether they are deliverable.
(6) However, health care deliverers and users in general are expected to increase their support and consideration for the information provided by the Board, in order to fulfill the purpose for which it was established.
(7) "However, there are major political risks over this scenario, reflecting uncertainties over whether the post-2015 spending squeeze is politically deliverable, especially if the 2015 election produces a Labour-led majority or coalition government," he said.
(8) The nurse will be the healthcare change agent of the twenty-first century using the expertise developed as the deliverer to the patient while the physician will become the advisor to patients, business, and the community.
(9) For him, "a world in which we are no longer burdened by debt, credit, hock, mortgage, HP, might not be a grievous loss but a deliverance … a more modest and more prudent way of living".
(10) The provider leadership task must be deliverable – an averagely performing foundation trust or trust has to be able to stay in surplus and carry a reasonable level of risk.
(11) What I want is an immediate and urgent ceasefire, but we want it to be based on deliverables for the future."
(12) One-hundred nineteen control patients, exposed 789 times to noncarrier health care deliverers, were also negative.
(13) Deliverances or exorcisms can often involve physical violence.
(14) The in vitro response of P. falciparum to amodiaquine, quinine and quinidine was assessed in Tanga region where chloroquine resistance is established, to determine baseline susceptibility levels which could guide health care deliverers on the suitability of these drugs for the treatment of falciparum malaria in the areas studied.
(15) One plausible explanation for the discrepancy between fact and remembrance is that the survivors, who regarded their own deliverance as miraculous, found the chances slim that someone as helpless as a dwarf could escape death.
(16) The truth is that Nigeria is a failed state as a deliverer of safety, health and education to its people, but a very successful state for those who own and control or benefit from its increasingly dynamic economy.
(17) Other medications might be deliverable via the GI tract in the early postoperative period.
(18) As reports of possible bid for child protection contracts make clear, it hopes to be a prime deliverer of many more important, sensitive services.
(19) "Exam boards agree with us that, on the face of it, this timetable is deliverable, but of course we will take action if at any time the timetable is at risk," Stacey told Gove in a letter published on Friday (pdf).
(20) He said: “I just don’t think it makes sense to say you’re never going to have a single metre of extra concrete anywhere, in any runway anywhere in the United Kingdom...It will need to be discussed again because – how can I put it – I’ve seen the perils of the past of putting something which you know in your heart of hearts is not necessarily deliverable.” But Clegg said he accepted the vote.
Rescuer
Definition:
(n.) One who rescues.
Example Sentences:
(1) Among possible causes for the increase in deaths in the Mediterranean this year, the agency cited a worsening quality of vessels and smugglers’ tactics to avoid detection by authorities, such as sending many boats out at the same time, which makes the work of rescuers harder.
(2) The contemporary family romance myth of the secret benefactor as rescuer is described.
(3) The interior minister, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, told MPs that security problems were making it difficult for rescuers to reach some areas.
(4) The second hit as rescuers arrived to deal with the casualties.
(5) Dolly Parton has offered to adopt a dog that was found abandoned at Glastonbury festival, after rescuers named the canine after her.
(6) The Chinese premier Li Keqiang flew into the disaster zone, where he met rescuers and survivors.
(7) A linear regression model based on emergency response times for 942 patients discovered in ventricular fibrillation was used to estimate expected survival rates if the first-responding rescuers, in addition to paramedics, had been equipped and trained to defibrillate.
(8) Jamielah had become dehydrated and was vomiting so they pleaded with the soldiers to allow the rescuers in.
(9) Rescuers found two traumatised survivors in a wash of scattered debris.
(10) The "Lifeway" is a device for rescue breathing consisting of a mouthpiece for the rescuer, a non-rebreathing valve, a mouth-sealing cap and a glosso-palatinal tube (GPT) reaching into the patient's mouth.
(11) Nine months post-disaster, 134 rescuers involved in an off-shore oil rig disaster were investigated by using a structured self report questionnaire to chart their experience of coping with disaster impact stressors and their mental and physical health 9 months after the disaster.
(12) Georgia's rescuers put up tarpaulins to shield her from the camera lenses as they extracted her through a 10ft square hole in the brickwork and took her to hospital.
(13) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Rescuers search for five children trapped under rubble.
(14) Considerable problems exist for the initial rescuer and first responder, particularly if that person is alone.
(15) Six rescuers waded through and made their way upstairs.
(16) Of the 146 deaths in confined spaces, only 12% were in rescuers, fewer than previously reported.
(17) The results of this investigation showed that American Heart Association (AHA)-certified rescuers are able to produce a consistent pattern of chest wall displacement during a manikin training exercise, and only small differences in displacement recordings are found when comparing one certified rescuer to another.
(18) Rescuers, meanwhile, sifted through the rubble in search of more casualties but a fire hindered their efforts.
(19) The city centre ground to a halt as rescuers pulled bloodied corpses from the rubble and dazed, dust-covered survivors stumbled away.
(20) When the drama occurs, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) must be instituted at once according to a well-defined sequence: first, elementary CPR performed by any occasional rescuer, including 1. clearing of the airways, 2. mouth-to-mouth breathing, and 3. closed cardiac massage (CCM); then, medical CPR applied by a professional rescuer pursuing the same objectives and consisting of 1. tracheal intubation, 2. manual or mechanical ventilation with pure oxygen, 3. controlled efficacy CCM, and 4. intratracheal, then intravenous or intraosseous injection of adrenaline.