actually i have a list of five exclusion criteria. So if i say.....
The criteria for exclusion are patients' who are diabetic, have peripheral arterial disease, rheumotoid arthritis, and also patients' that are allergic to calcium carbonate or manuka honey.
does this sound ok? thanks Mark and corby x
As mike11... points out, this implies that the criteria are the patients rather than their conditions. How about:
I (or we) exclude patients who are diabetic, have peripheral arterial disease, rheumotoid arthritis, or are allergic to calcium carbonate or manuka honey.
I (or we) exclude patients who are diabetic, who have peripheral arterial disease or rheumotoid arthritis, or are allergic to calcium carbonate or manuka honey.
> The criteria for exclusion are patients' who are...
You seem determined to put an apostrophe onto the end of the word patients! You would do this ONLY if you were saying something like "The patients' problems" or "The patients' treatment". In all other cases, it's just a plural noun and, as such, doesn't need an apostrophe.
'The criteria for exclusion [from the study] are patients having diabetes, peripheral arterial disease or rheumatoid arthritis, and those presenting with an allergy to calcium carbonate or manuka honey.'
'Excluded [from the study] are patients having diabetes, peripheral arterial disease or rheumatoid arthritis, and those presenting with an allergy to calcium carbonate or manuka honey.'