How do you explain medical figures clearly without overclaiming?
Short answer
Describe what the figure directly shows first, then add the study context, then state the limitations. Good figure explanation is not about sounding technical. It is about being accurate about what the visual supports and what still depends on the rest of the paper.
Execution Steps
- 1State what the figure shows at a surface level before interpreting it.
- 2Name the groups, variables, endpoints, or comparisons being displayed.
- 3Connect the figure back to the study question and result section.
- 4Separate direct observations from inference or speculation.
- 5Use LancetClaw when you want a figure translated into plain language with context.
Prompt Template
Help me explain this medical figure clearly. Start with what it directly shows, then add the context, and tell me what I should not overclaim.
Common Failure Points
- Jumping straight to conclusions without describing the figure
- Ignoring the study context around the visual
- Using the figure to claim more than the data actually supports
FAQ
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