assistor


Also found in: Medical.

assistor

(əˈsɪstə)
n
a variant spelling of assister
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
A person was also arrested in a downtown Cotabato City precinct when poll watchers challenged his purported identity as an assistor of voters.
The new technology, known as a ventricular assistor or 'HeartMate' is an electrically powered heart pump that improves blood flow and, in turn, the long-term health outcome for patients with heart disease.
A new technology, known as a ventricular assistor or 'HeartMate' is being used at Hamad Medical Corporation's (HMC) Heart Hospital to treat patients at advanced stages of heart failure.
However, the Sunderland stalwart is joint top assistor from the campaign just gone, level with McGeady with five apiece.
A Vermont dairy farm family was surprised to find they were eligible for expanded Medicaid; they explained that "we met with the assistor who looked at our [net] income, and we qualified...
The interpreter, unlike an assistor, must be registered to vote in the same county.
During a tour of the plant assembly line, Adam Humperson aged 22, from Erdington, guided the Duke of Cambridge as he used an assistor to help fit a tyre in the boot of a new car.
A 2016 survey of marketplace assistors conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that assistor programs helped 5.3 million people during the ACA's third open enrollment period in 2015-2016, with uninsured people accounting for a majority of them.
There have not been consistent national policies governing states' expenditure of rebate monies (other than a limitation on delegate stipends, which usually are supplemented by state assistor fees in any event).
6744, VOLUNTEER ASSISTOR'S TEST/RETEST at iii-v (2011), available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f6744.pdf.