0 not informed or not having the same ideas as most people about something, so that you make mistakes:
Older, experienced clinicians often view guidelines as a set of directives issued by panels composed of physicians who are out of touch with real patients.
They had no radio, neither receiver nor transmitter, so once on the high seas she was totally out of touch with civilisation.
However, the practice of reading instruction remained out of touch with the research, emphasizing a variety of language activities but excluding teaching of grapheme-phoneme relationships.
But, unable to view things at the human level, he is out of touch with nature and loses his place in the natural harmony.
Overall they ranked the advertisements that used stereotypes which portrayed older people as objects of ridicule, out of touch and unattractive as most offensive.
Dividing her professional and personal worlds to become a "good doctor" has left her out of touch with who she is.
Such a ship was like a modern space capsule, but totally out of touch with outside society.
They know, as we should, that being out of touch with children's experience is damaging.