What's the difference between inadvisability and injudiciousness?

Inadvisability


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It is concluded that it is inadvisable for a single observer to judge BMD when studying routine X-ray studies of the peripheral skeleton.
  • (2) The use of bucolome in infants with hyperbilirubinaemia is inadvisable.
  • (3) Our experience supports the use of this flap for local hand and forearm coverage when local tissue is unavailable and skin grafting is deemed inadvisable.
  • (4) Driving to meet Steve Horton, a US tax accountant whose clients include bankers, entrepreneurs and high-flying American lawyers based in France, the taxi driver passes Fouquet's, the expensive restaurant where Sarkozy inadvisedly celebrated his own election victory, in company with pop star Johnny Hallyday, film star Jean Reno and high-flying businessmen, prompting the coining of the soubriquet President Bling Bling.
  • (5) Yet it would be inadvisable to ban them, because that would drive people with eating disorders further into the shadows and away from potential help, she said.
  • (6) However, because of the inability to augment iron absorption to compensate for blood loss, it would be inadvisable for the patient with a partial gastrectomy to take a high dosage of aspirin for long periods of time, unless aspirin-induced blood loss is measured and shown to be very low.
  • (7) Species differences make extrapolation inadvisable.
  • (8) It is concluded that routine administration of DDAVP to CABG patients is inadvisable because hemodynamic side effects are potentially dangerous and therapeutic benefit is highly unlikely.
  • (9) Its use should particularly be considered in patients to whom the administration of radiographic contrast material is inadvisable.
  • (10) The use of inhalation anaesthetics is therefore inadvisable during bronchoscopy in adults unless sufficient anaesthetic scavenging can be established.
  • (11) Although commercial test kits for detecting elevated levels of maternal serum AFP were approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1983, ACOG has opposed their routine use on the grounds that the high incidence of false positive results makes it inadvisable to use the test in pregnant women who do not have access to high-quality follow-up tests and counseling.
  • (12) Contraindications include difficulty in establishing an adequate pneumoperitoneum; acute peritonitis, ileus, or intestinal obstruction; and inadvisability of penumoperitoneum or Trendelenburg position.
  • (13) Thymus tissue which is not removed during the operation is one of the causes of recurrent myasthenia, while unjustified extension of the volume of the operation in nonneoplastic affection of the thymus is also inadvisable.
  • (14) The light microscopical diagnoses of "reticulum cell sarcoma" seems now inadvisable, since thhe majority of these cases, when examined by electron microscopy, were found to be "blast cell sarcomas", probably lymphoid in nature.
  • (15) There are occasions when intermaxillary fixation may be inadvisable, and in these instances external fixation techniques may be an appropriate means of immobilization.
  • (16) If a paramedian sternotomy is proved, simple reclosure is inadvisable.
  • (17) The use of ampicillin as a single agent for the treatment of pyelonephritis, however, is inadvisable.
  • (18) It is concluded that operation for unilateral cataract is inadvisable, if the vision of the fellow eye is good and contact lenses cannot be used, that the time between operations for bilateral cataract should be as short as possible, and that the use of contact lenses is essential.
  • (19) Results are presented indicating the inadvisability of using lower animals as test subjects with the aim of predicting toxicity for higher animals.
  • (20) We present a case in which ovarian function was annuled through radiotherapy, instead of resorting to the most commonly used oophorectomy, since the patient's severe respiratory dysfunction made surgery inadvisable.

Injudiciousness


Definition:

  • (n.) The quality of being injudicious; want of sound judgment; indiscretion.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) During the psychosocial dying occurs a continual death of identity, integrity, and relationship, which has the origin in station ideologies, insufficient training of the staff, psychiatric injudiciousness, and in the fail in death-contact.
  • (2) In view of the natural fluctuation in the number of CD4+ cells it was felt to be injudicious to act upon a single count.
  • (3) When treatment for cure or significant palliation is not possible, however, the goal should shift to protection of the fetus from damage by the injudicious use of teratogenic cancer therapy.
  • (4) Injudicious as Neil Hamilton's misdemeanors were, they were only the flotsam on the tide of Tory sleaze.
  • (5) This study suggests: (1) specific proteins or amino acids may be responsible for different developmental measures; (2) injudicious dietary restrictions in pregnancy should be avoided; (3) the determination of alpha1 globulin and a few amino acids such as glycine, lysine, and histidine in late pregancy may be used as predictors of fetal growth and development.
  • (6) Unfortunately, injudicious use of intravenous fluids and irrational prescription of antibiotics and anti-diarrheal agents is quite common even in the hands of pediatricians.
  • (7) Complications of injudicious treatment can be life threatening.
  • (8) This case is presented to demonstrate that life-threatening events may result after the injudicious use of enemas in children.
  • (9) The consequential errors led to (a) an injudicious imposition of 'objectivity' at all levels of allocation, (b) an unjustified insistence that the same method be used at each administrative level in an additive and transitive manner, (c) the exclusion of general practitioner services from their considerations, (d) a failure to delineate those decisions which are in fact political decisions, thus to concatenate them, inappropriately, with technical and professional issues.
  • (10) If applied early and injudiciously, heat may adversely affect resolution of the trauma and prolong the rehabilitation of the athlete.
  • (11) Greater caution against injudicious sterilization is advised.
  • (12) These results indicate that injudicious and severe hypocapnic hyperventilation may induce impaired myocardial tissue perfusion and oxygenation although normal cardiac output and arterial blood oxygenation are maintained.
  • (13) The most common errors involved inadequate fetal monitoring, the injudicious use of oxytocin and the failure to recognize a high-risk pregnancy, such as prematurity or postterm or multiple gestation.
  • (14) This study supports the findings of previous studies of considerable neurological adverse effects of neuroleptics in this patient group and cautions against their injudicious use.
  • (15) The injudicious use of heat and cold and electrical appliances of various types usually indicate a therapist in search of a treatment.
  • (16) Although primary intraperitoneal repair of selected penetrating colon injuries is a feasible method of treatment, injudicious use of this method, especially in wounds of the right colon, led to increased morbidity, in the group of 90 patients studied.
  • (17) The injudicious use of a systemically administered herb containing psoralens derived from the fruits of Ammi majus in combination with exposure of the skin to the sun caused a severe phototoxic dermatitis in a Moroccan patient with vitiligo.
  • (18) Thus, on the side of potential therapeutic applications, injudicious use of these vitamins is associated with previously unsuspected toxicity in the fetus and newborn.
  • (19) But the Clarke report was an investigation into schools that failed to provide a balance or acted injudiciously.
  • (20) Injudicious sequestrectomy or very severe disease may lead to loss of length of the bone.