Noun
An establishment for the treatment of the sick; a resort for invalids. See Sanitarium.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAfter spending months in a sanatorium during the summer and autumn of 1900, Weber and his wife travelled to Italy at the end of the year and did not return to Heidelberg until April 1902. Source: Internet
A lot of the business in the sanatorium was treating addiction – a lot of mental health problems were secretly addiction problems,” he says. Source: Internet
Angry protesters from the village of Novi Sanzhary blocked the road leading to a sanatorium where the evacuees are due to be held in quarantine for at least two weeks to make sure they were not carrying the virus. Source: Internet
Correspondence in Collected Essays Journalism and Letters, Secker & Warburg 1968 When Orwell was in the sanatorium in Kent, his wife's friend Lydia Jackson visited. Source: Internet
He recovered sufficiently to get up and on 27 May 1937 was sent on to Tarragona and two days later to a POUM sanatorium in the suburbs of Barcelona. Source: Internet
Ken Russell 's TV movie The Strange Affliction of Anton Bruckner, starring Peter Mackriel, also fictionalizes Bruckner's real-life stay at a sanatorium because of obsessive-compulsive disorder (or 'numeromania' as it was then described). Source: Internet