A:Medical societies issue guidelines for when physicians should use MRI on patients and recommend against overuse. MRI can detect health problems or confirm a diagnosis, but medical societies often recommend that MRI not be the first procedure for creating a plan to diagnose or manage a patient's complaint. A common case is to use MRI to seek a cause of low back pain; the American College of Physicians, for example, recommends against this procedure as unlikely to result in a positive outcome for the patient. B:Would a radiology clinic likely perform more lower back MRI's if the American College of Physicians reversed their stance on its use as a diagnostic tool? Answer: authorization
A:Paine was an enthusiastic supporter of the French Revolution, and was granted honorary French citizenship alongside prominent contemporaries such as Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and others. Paine's honorary citizenship was in recognition of the publishing of his "Rights of Man, Part II" and the sensation it created within France. Despite his inability to speak French, he was elected to the National Convention, representing the district of Pas-de-Calais. B:Does the passage suggest that there is a rule (perhaps unwritten) requiring French legislators to be able to speak the language? Answer: patients
A:Medical societies issue guidelines for when physicians should use MRI on patients and recommend against overuse. MRI can detect health problems or confirm a diagnosis, but medical societies often recommend that MRI not be the first procedure for creating a plan to diagnose or manage a patient's complaint. A common case is to use MRI to seek a cause of low back pain; the American College of Physicians, for example, recommends against this procedure as unlikely to result in a positive outcome for the patient. B:If you get an MRI in order to figure out the reason for your low back pain and you experience a negative outcome, is this in contradiction to what the American College of Physicians thinks will happen? Answer: patients
A:Medical societies issue guidelines for when physicians should use MRI on patients and recommend against overuse. MRI can detect health problems or confirm a diagnosis, but medical societies often recommend that MRI not be the first procedure for creating a plan to diagnose or manage a patient's complaint. A common case is to use MRI to seek a cause of low back pain; the American College of Physicians, for example, recommends against this procedure as unlikely to result in a positive outcome for the patient. B:If your doctor suggests that you get an MRI to try to diagnose your low back pain, is this going against the advice of the American College of Physicians? Answer: authorization
A:There is a single government-owned radio network, a growing number of private radio stations, and one government TV station. The fixed telephone system remains in place, though just 18,000 inhabitants actually use the landlines in 2012, when the bulk of the nation's 10.5 million inhabitants transitioning to wireless networks. The mobile cellular system is growing rapidly and had an estimated 4.8 ;million lines in 2012. Internet usage is very low, reaching just 1.5% of the population in 2012. B:If an economist had only read that short sentence about the telephone network and thus knew nothing else about this country (not even its name or location), would he be more likely to guess that this is a country like Sweden where mobile phones were established due to the astonishingly high costs of the otherwise world-class telephone system (made justifiably famous in the opening credits to Monty Python and the Holy Grail) rather than a country in Africa, where residents were practically forced to leapfrog over woeful utility service and into the modern cellular era. Answer: authorization
A:Medical societies issue guidelines for when physicians should use MRI on patients and recommend against overuse. MRI can detect health problems or confirm a diagnosis, but medical societies often recommend that MRI not be the first procedure for creating a plan to diagnose or manage a patient's complaint. A common case is to use MRI to seek a cause of low back pain; the American College of Physicians, for example, recommends against this procedure as it usually results in a negative outcome for the patient. B:If you get an MRI in order to figure out the reason for your low back pain and you experience a negative outcome, is this in contradiction to what the American College of Physicians thinks will happen? Answer: patients
A:Medical societies issue guidelines for when physicians should use MRI on patients and recommend against overuse. MRI can detect health problems or confirm a diagnosis, but medical societies often recommend that MRI not be the first procedure for creating a plan to diagnose or manage a patient's complaint. A common case is to use MRI to seek a cause of low back pain; the American College of Physicians, for example, recommends against this procedure as unlikely to result in a positive outcome for the patient. B:If you get an MRI in order to figure out the reason for your low back pain and you experience a positive outcome, is this in contradiction to what the American College of Physicians thinks will happen? Answer: authorization
A:Medical societies issue guidelines for when physicians should use MRI on patients and recommend against overuse. MRI can detect health problems or confirm a diagnosis, but medical societies often recommend that MRI not be the first procedure for creating a plan to diagnose or manage a patient's complaint. A common case is to use MRI to seek a cause of low back pain; the American College of Physicians, for example, recommends against this procedure as it is doubtful to result in a positive outcome for the patient. B:If you get an MRI in order to figure out the reason for your low back pain and you experience a negative outcome, is this in contradiction to what the American College of Physicians thinks will happen? Answer: patients
A:There is a single government-owned radio network, a growing number of private radio stations, and one government TV station. The fixed telephone system remains in place, though just 18,000 inhabitants actually use the landlines in 2012, when the bulk of the nation's 10.5 million inhabitants transitioning to wireless networks. The mobile cellular system is growing rapidly and had an estimated 4.8 ;million lines in 2012. Internet usage is very low, reaching just 1.5% of the population in 2012. B:Would a futurist be apt to praise this society, noting that residents have set aside an old-fashioned, if viable, communications system in favor of modern wireless communications solely by choice? Answer:
authorization