malpractice
English
Etymology
Noun
malpractice (countable and uncountable, plural malpractices)
- The improper treatment of a patient by a physician that results in injury or loss.
- (tort law) Improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person.
- 2007, Stephen Prosser, To Be a Servant-Leader[1]:
- When such a breakdown occurs there must be a full examination of the corruption that has been committed, and the leaders involved in malpractices must be encouraged to give a full account of what took place.
- 2019 October 7, Chris Murphy, “How to Make a Progressive Foreign Policy Actually Work”, in The Atlantic[2]:
- A national-security budget where we spend 20 times as much money on the military and intelligence agencies as we do on diplomacy, democracy promotion, and smart power, is foreign-policy malpractice in the modern world.
- 2025 April 19, Michael S. Schmidt, Michael C. Bender, quoting May Mailman, “Trump Officials Blame Mistake for Setting Off Confrontation With Harvard”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN:
- “It was malpractice on the side of Harvard’s lawyers not to pick up the phone and call the members of the antisemitism task force who they had been talking to for weeks,” said May Mailman, the White House senior policy strategist.
Translations
the improper treatment of a patient by a physician that results in injury or loss
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improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
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