Diagnostic criteria are like clues that help doctors figure out what is wrong with you.
Imagine you have a toy box full of different toys, cars, blocks, dolls, and balls. Each toy has its own special way of acting. If your favorite car starts making a beep-beep sound when it should be going vroom-vroom, that’s like a clue. Doctors use diagnostic criteria to know what kind of toy (or illness) is causing the problem.
How It Works
Think of diagnostic criteria as a list of questions or signs that doctors check off, just like you might check off things on your own "toys-to-play-with" list.
- If a toy makes a strange noise, that's one clue.
- If it doesn’t move the way it should, that’s another clue.
- If it breaks when you push it, that's even more clues!
Doctors use these clues to decide what kind of illness or problem you have, just like you might guess which toy is broken based on how it acts.
That’s how diagnostic criteria help doctors solve the mystery of what's making you feel a certain way.
Examples
- If most are present, they say you have the flu.
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See also
- What is Biological, environmental, diagnostic, and societal factors?
- What are health clinics?
- What is medication?
- What are treatment responses?
- What are pills or sprays?