Systemic or systematic?
Which sentences are correct?
- No evidence of systemic discrimination was found.
- No evidence of systematic discrimination was found.
- Systemic change is needed to save the organization.
- Systematic change is needed to save the organization.
- Rheumatoid arthritis is a systemic autoimmune disease.
- Rheumatoid arthritis is a systematic autoimmune disease.
- The researchers conducted a systemic review of the data.
- The researchers conducted a systematic review of the data.
- He took a systemic approach to improving his free-throw score.
- He took a systematic approach to improving his free-throw score.
The correct sentences are A, C, E, H, and J.
Why?
The term systemic means “affecting the entire body or system,” while systematic means “according to a system or method.”
People commonly use “systematic” when the correct choice is “systemic.” Confusion in the opposite direction is rare.
When unsure of the proper term, separately substitute both “system-wide” and “step-by-step” in the intended space. If “system-wide” works better in the sentence, then systemic is the correct choice of term. If “step-by-step” is the better fit, then go with systematic instead.
Let’s look again at our sentences:
- No evidence of system-wide discrimination was found.
- No evidence of step-by-step discrimination was found.
- System-wide change is needed to save the organization.
- Step-by-step change is needed to save the organization.
- Rheumatoid arthritis is a system-wide autoimmune disease.
- Rheumatoid arthritis is a step-by-step autoimmune disease.
- The researchers conducted a system-wide review of the data.
- The researchers conducted a step-by-step review of the data.
- He took a system-wide approach to improving his free-throw score.
- He took a step-by-step approach to improving his free-throw score.
The substitutions make it easy to choose the right term.
Now that you know . . . you know!
