Explain Medical Statistics Without Losing the Meaning
LancetClaw helps readers work through the statistics that usually slow them down: hazard ratios, confidence intervals, p-values, odds ratios, non-inferiority margins, subgroup findings, and more. The focus is not just translation, but correct interpretation.
Audience
Clinicians, medical students, writers, editors, and researchers reading quantitative papers.
Use Case
Interpret a statistical result before you rely on it, cite it, or try to explain it to someone else.
Guide Depth
4 steps · 5 features
Workflow
- 1Paste the result paragraph or start from a paper.
- 2LancetClaw identifies the statistical terms and the comparison being made.
- 3OpenClaw explains the finding in context and flags common overclaims.
- 4Use the explanation to read, write, teach, or review more accurately.
Outcome Signals
- Fewer errors when interpreting quantitative results
- More confidence reading dense clinical and research papers
- Better explanations for drafts, presentations, and team discussions
Execution Checklist
- Plain-language explanation of common medical statistics
- Explains what a result means and what it does not prove
- Connects numerical findings back to the study question
- Useful for reading, teaching, writing, and editorial review
- Works from a quoted result block or a full paper workflow
Common Questions
Composite Team Feedback
Representative feedback patterns from teams using this kind of medical literature workflow.
Clinician
"Paper review now tells me what the methods and figures actually mean before I rely on a study in practice."
Faster evidence triage for high-stakes reading
Clinical Pharmacist
"We use these workflows to sanity-check new evidence before it changes how we update recommendations."
More confident evidence decisions