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Judgment & ambiguity · Calibrating confidence

A patient asks you point-blank how confident you are in their diagnosis when the imaging is equivocal and one specialist has hedged. How do you answer them honestly without either falsely reassuring or needlessly frightening them?

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I answer honestly, because false confidence and false alarm are both failures of care — the skill is naming real uncertainty in a way the patient can hold.

The full answer: structure, worked example, likely follow-up.

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