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outcome

An outcome is the result of a process, action, or event. It denotes what happens after something occurs, and can be anticipated or observed after the fact. The term comes from the idea of something that comes out of a situation.

In probability and statistics, an outcome refers to a possible result of a random experiment. The set

In research and medicine, outcomes are measures used to assess effects or safety. A primary outcome is

In policy, business, and project management, outcomes refer to the longer-term impacts or changes that follow

Interpreting outcomes involves consideration of timing, context, and uncertainty. Transparent reporting of how outcomes are defined

of
all
outcomes
is
the
sample
space;
each
outcome
is
a
single
element
of
that
space.
When
the
experiment
is
repeated,
different
outcomes
may
occur,
and
probabilities
describe
the
likelihoods
of
these
outcomes.
the
main
result
a
study
is
designed
to
evaluate,
while
secondary
outcomes
are
additional
effects
of
interest.
Outcomes
can
be
quantitative
(such
as
weight
change,
blood
pressure)
or
qualitative
(such
as
symptom
improvement).
an
intervention,
as
opposed
to
outputs,
which
are
the
immediate
products
or
services
delivered.
Outcomes
may
be
intended
or
unintended
and
are
subject
to
attribution
challenges.
and
measured
improves
comparability
across
studies
and
programs.