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Scientists typically make repeated measurements of a quantity to ensure the quality of their findings and to evaluate both the precision and the accuracy of their results. Measurements are said to be precise if they yield very similar results when repeated in the same manner. A measurement is considered accurate if it yields a result that is very close to the true or the accepted value. Precise values agree with each other; accurate values agree with a true value. 
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The meaning of illness is individualized to each person who experiences an alteration in health. In contrast, disease is a medical term indicating a pathological change in the structure and function of the body or mind. It is a condition that has specific symptoms and boundaries.
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Classification, Ontology, and Precision Medicine

Melissa A Haendel1, Christopher G Chute1, Peter N Robinson1

  • 1From the Oregon Clinical and Translational Research Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, and the Linus Pauling Institute and the Center for Genome Research and Biocomputing, Oregon State University, Corvallis (M.A.H.); Johns Hopkins University Schools of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing, Baltimore (C.G.C.); and the Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine and the Institute for Systems Genomics, University of Connecticut - both in Farmington (P.N.R.).

The New England Journal of Medicine
|October 11, 2018
PubMed
Summary

No abstract available in PubMed .

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