Prognosis
in sentence
58 examples of Prognosis in a sentence
For the foreseeable future, machines probably will not be able to match humans in helping chronically ill patients whose
prognosis
remains uncertain.
Yeats’s political
prognosis
was shaped by his religious eschatology.
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.
It is time to redress that balance, or Soros’s gloomy
prognosis
may become reality.
But now that British Prime Minister Theresa May has implied that she prefers a “hard” Brexit, a gloomy long-term
prognosis
is probably correct.
Oregon physicians may write a prescription for a lethal substance on the explicit request of a terminally ill patient, provided they can confirm the fatal prognosis, the patient’s decision-making capacity, and have informed the patient about any feasible alternative such as hospice care or pain-control options.
And yet, despite a palpable sense of concern that something is very wrong, the
prognosis
for significant change is bleak – and deteriorating.
And migration is the issue that brings that
prognosis
home (not just metaphorically) to today’s angst-inspired nationalists.
There is an increasing consensus on the prognosis: this downturn will be prolonged and widespread.
The
prognosis
for healthcare reform in Europe (and in North America, for that matter) is not good.
That could well make the
prognosis
for China the decisive factor for the global economic outlook.
Emphasizing greed and corruption as causes of the crisis leads to a bleak
prognosis.
In fairness, this dark
prognosis
was not universally embraced.
But if policymakers fail to complete unfinished business, the
prognosis
will be bleak.
There are conflicting reports regarding his physical condition, with some presenting a grim
prognosis.
Otaviano Canuto, a World Bank vice president, and his collaborators have just produced a long report that makes the case for this optimistic
prognosis.
This leaves us trying to use patterns from past, dissimilar crises to try to infer the likely
prognosis
for the current crisis.
But the long-term
prognosis
– made especially dire by health-care reform’s inability to make much of a dent in rising medical costs – is sufficiently bleak that there is increasing bipartisan momentum to do something.
But while the near-term
prognosis
for the Chinese economy is far more encouraging than most had expected, an eerie sense of denial, bordering on hubris, appears to be creeping into China’s strategic groupthink.
After a heart attack, for example, the
prognosis
depends on the presence or absence of depression more than on virtually any measure of cardiac function.
We might also find comfort in having the option of “assisted dying” as soon as our quality of life and our
prognosis
dipped below a certain threshold.
But although we would almost certainly welcome an extended, healthy lifespan, many of us would not want to prolong matters once our quality of life or
prognosis
dipped below a certain threshold.
Barring a return to form in Washington, DC, the
prognosis
for the dollar-centric post-war order looks grim.
The earlier, overly optimistic
prognosis
of a sustained growth pickup has finally given way to the grim reality that both structural and cyclical headwinds are bearing down on economic activity.
That
prognosis
has since become even more likely.
Now that the two sides have agreed to a truce in the form of a “phase one” trade deal, there is hope that the trade
prognosis
will improve.
Moreover, their
prognosis
is not only based on a fear of being wrong again; many seem resigned to such a result, and some may even be hoping for it.
If that grim
prognosis
about the state of transatlantic relations was true earlier this month, it is all the more relevant now that the impeachment drama has reached a fever pitch.
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