English | German | Russian | Czech
B2

diagnosis English

Meaning diagnosis meaning

What does diagnosis mean?
Definitions in simple English

diagnosis

A diagnosis is the naming of your disease, injury, or other problem, usually by a doctor. It took a long time, but she finally got a diagnosis of depression.

diagnosis

identifying the nature or cause of some phenomenon

Synonyms diagnosis synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as diagnosis?

Examples diagnosis examples

How do I use diagnosis in a sentence?

Simple sentences

You must leave diagnosis to your doctor.
She gives a careful diagnosis to everyone.
What's your diagnosis?
What's the diagnosis?
What was the diagnosis?
What is the diagnosis?
It's a plausible diagnosis.
Self-diagnosis can be dangerous.
All three doctors agreed on the diagnosis.
Avian medicine - diagnosis and treatment of illnesses.
You must leave the diagnosis to your doctor.
The doctor made the correct diagnosis.

Movie subtitles

I've been fully aware of Maggie's diagnosis.
Who made your diagnosis?
In short, I have failed to make a diagnosis.
If Dr. Hackenbush is not going to continue with the examination, professor may we have your diagnosis, please?
Dr. Steinberg, do you remember your diagnosis?
That was what she thought, but my diagnosis was different.
In your case, my boy, diagnosis is extremely difficult.
A charming diagnosis for a broken-down horse.
Your diagnosis is, as usual, wrong, Dr. Fleurot.
That's a funny diagnosis for a fellow who's supposed to have just come from vacation.
I made no medical diagnosis. I was shocked to see him collapse and didn't think beyond that.
Your diagnosis was correct, Craig.
Unless I'm mistaken, this is your personal diagnosis of Mrs. Graham's illness?
If you insist upon knowing. your husband called at my office for the diagnosis of your case. I'd say about ten days ago.
Mr Carmichael, when I made your acquaintance yesterday, you volunteered an amazingly correct diagnosis of Shanghai Lily and I see no reason for you to have changed it.
I wouldn't presume to make a diagnosis.
I made no medical diagnosis.
Suspicion? It's a diagnosis, dear.
The tiniest detail often sheds light on the diagnosis.
Diagnosis: suicide strangulation with a belt.
That's an excellent diagnosis.
Do you agree with my diagnosis?
My diagnosis was different.
And in diagnosis, you must never underrate the value of subconscious observation.
You can hardly expect a diagnosis from me based upon your appearance alone.
I imagine that's Mr. Korvo's diagnosis.
Her alcoholism isn't the basis for my diagnosis.
Well, that's the diagnosis.
IT'S AN INTERESTING DIAGNOSIS, DOCTOR.
But explain your diagnosis in layman's terms.
But after this demonstration, I think my diagnosis was entirely too mild.
The laboratory findings confirm original Dr. Norton's diagnosis.
Would you like to be paid for your diagnosis?
I accepted him to find out if I'd been right in my original diagnosis.
I can't make any positive diagnosis right now.

News and current affairs

The IMF's first effort at prescribing a cure may be flawed, but its diagnosis of a financial sector bloated by moral hazard is manifestly correct.
And, to be sustainable, a successful vision must also be an effective diagnosis of the situation that a group faces.
Harvard University's Samuel Huntington also thinks such comparisons wrong-headed, but disagrees with Fukuyama on the diagnosis.
Because the defects found in clones are not genetic mutations, pre-implantation diagnosis at the embryo stage will not reveal their existence.
In 1999, less than three years after his diagnosis, Armstrong won his first Tour de France.
When we think about medical diagnosis, we usually think in terms of science.
The latter point, however, is where the current puzzles reside for psychiatric diagnosis as public policy.
With thoughtfulness and perseverance, psychiatry's current deliberations about diagnosis as public policy will provide a road map for the broader medical debates lurking ahead.
Thus, the Washington diagnosis often confuses cause and effect.
Without a proper diagnosis of the 2008 crisis, an effective cure cannot be prescribed.
Looking back at the crisis a decade later, we can see more clearly how wrong the diagnosis, prescription, and prognosis of the IMF and United States Treasury were.
Over-medication would affect fewer Americans if we could rein in such clear examples of over-diagnosis.
We would have to set the thresholds for psychiatric diagnosis a lot higher, resurrecting the distinction between chronic illness and mild suffering.
Psychiatry is separated from other medical specialties by its lack of an objective basis for diagnosis.
The first, better-known diagnosis is that demand has collapsed because of high debt accumulated prior to the crisis.
But the IMF's big-picture diagnosis of the problem gets a lot right.
Even patients who are diagnosed with bipolar disorder often wait more than 10 years after initially seeking treatment for the correct diagnosis to be made.
But, perhaps as a consequence of concerted efforts to improve the recognition of bipolar disorder, during the past few years we have observed the emergence of an opposite phenomenon - over-diagnosis.
However, there seemed to be more over-diagnosis than under-diagnosis.
Patients who self-reported a previous diagnosis of bipolar disorder that was not confirmed by the SCID did not have a significantly higher risk for bipolar disorder than the patients who were negative for bipolar disorder by self-report and the SCID.
Such is the nature of the imperfect reliability of psychiatric diagnosis.
Over-diagnosis of bipolar disorder has costs.
But insufficient diagnostic rigor can result in over-diagnosis.
This bias is reinforced by the marketing message of pharmaceutical companies to physicians, which has emphasized research on delayed diagnosis and under-recognition of bipolar disorder, possibly sensitizing clinicians accordingly.
But proper diagnosis and treatment requires money, and funding is being cut.
The results of our study are consistent with prior studies suggesting possible problems with the diagnosis of bipolar disorder.
In essence, the practitioner must come to feel that the art of care-giving is as much at stake as the science and technology of diagnosis and treatment.

Are you looking for...?