| MASSEURS | Which people practise the art of treating the body by rubbing, kneading, or the like (8) |
| MASSEUR | Who practises the art of treating the body by rubbing, kneading, or the like (7) |
| MEDICINE | Art of treating disease |
| FENCERS | Which persons practise the art of using a sabre (7) |
| HULAHOOP | Exercise equipment kept up around the body by gyrating the hips (4,4) |
| REHEARSE | Practise the play about the carriage (8) |
| HOLISTIC | (Of medicine) treating the patient as a whole, physically and psychologically (8) |
| INGESTED | Took into the body by swallowing (8) |
| EQUALITY | English virtue, treating the duke and the dustman alike? (8) |
| DIALYSIS | Method of treating kidney failure by using a machine (8) |
| ORLISTAT | Drug for treating the overweight - or lean - with a temperature |
| HOSPITAL | Place for treating the sick (8) |
| ARKANSAN | N American refuge, a new place for treating the sick |
| ABETTING | Encouraging result of treating gnat bite |
| FONDU | In ballet, a lowering of the body by bending the knee of the supporting leg; French, 'melted' (5) |
| STICKFIGURE | Drawing of a human with the head represented by a circle and the body by straight lines (5,6) |
| PALPATE | In medicine, to examine (a part of the body) by means of touch or pressure (7) |
| HOMEOPATHY | Method of treating disease by the use of small amounts of a drug that, in healthy persons, produces symptoms similar to those of the disease being treated |
| HULAHOOPS | Light, rigid, circular bands whirled around the body by movements of the waist and hips (4,5) |
| PALLIATIVE | A drug or treatment that relieves suffering without treating the cause of the condition (10) |