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false-positive
[ fawls-poz-i-tiv ]
noun
- Medicine/Medical.
- a test result that is incorrect because the test indicated a condition or finding that does not exist:
a false-positive for syphilis.
- a person who receives this test result.
- any screening test result that incorrectly detected or classified a person or thing:
A false-positive at the airport could cause you to miss your flight.
- a person or thing identified by such a test.
adjective
- pertaining to or being a false-positive:
The test has a false-positive rate of 4%.
false positive
noun
- a result in a medical test that wrongly indicates the presence of the condition being tested for
- a person from whom such a result is obtained
Word History and Origins
Origin of false-positive1
Example Sentences
When I asked—a little hesitantly—she told me that she’s phased out the DRE for her patients in favor of a blood test that, while not foolproof, is less likely to result in false-positive results.
What’s become clear, he said, is that physicians conducting DREs are fairly likely to deliver false-positive results: “So then these men have to see a urologist, and that leads to unnecessary anxiety, unnecessary further care, perhaps an unnecessary biopsy.”
Mammography successfully reduces breast cancer mortality, but also carries the risk of false-positive findings.
"The reading workload is further compounded when screening programs employ double reading to improve cancer detection and decrease false-positive recalls."
The underlying hope is that in future, a certain number of tests could detect more cancers following risk stratification, with people at low risk could be avoided unnecessary tests and false-positive results and overdiagnosis could be prevented.
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