| Literature DB >> 30157514 |
Insook Cho1,2, David W Bates2,3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical decision support (CDS) systems can improve safety and facilitate evidence-based practice. However, clinical decisions are often affected by the cognitive biases and heuristics of clinicians, which is increasing the interest in behavioral and cognitive science approaches in the medical field.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30157514 PMCID: PMC6115210 DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1641221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Yearb Med Inform ISSN: 0943-4747
Fig. 1Flowchart of study inclusion
Behavioral economics concepts and psychology principles relevant to clinical decision support for clinicians and patients
| Concept | Definition |
|---|---|
|
Social norms
| Tendency to uphold one's social reputation based on descriptive or local norms. |
|
Framing effect
| Expression of logically equivalent information in different ways, to maximize the receptivity of clinicians. |
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Status-quo bias
| A preference for familiarity. People tend to resist change and prefer the current state of affairs. |
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Loss aversion/risk aversion
| A heightened tendency to focus on avoiding losses, even if this means engaging in risky behavior. |
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Decision fatigue
| Being presented with the same circumstances repeatedly will tend to make people lazy and perform worse, making bad decisions more likely. |
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Order effects: primacy and recency
| The effect ordering has on the relative utility weights associated with the attributes. Ordering effects may be observed as a consequence of the order in which choice sets, scenarios, or attributes appear in a questionnaire. |
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Salience effect
| Increasing the distinctness of important material so that it will be noticed. |
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IKEA effect
| Overvaluing a product to which one has contributed time and effort. |
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Herding
| Decisions influenced by other colleagues. |
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Heuristics
| Mental shortcuts based on pattern recognition that drive most decision-making take precedence over rule-based decisions (analytic cognitive process), by springing to mind spontaneously and effortlessly. |
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Cognitive bias: overconfidence
| Errors in probability judgments due to overestimating past appropriate behaviors and future successes. |
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Cognitive bias: anchoring
| The tendency to perceptually lock onto features of the patient's initial presentation too early during the diagnosis, and failing to adjust this initial impression in the light of subsequent information. |
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Cognitive bias: availability
| The disposition to judge things as being more likely (or occurring frequently) if they readily come to mind. For example, recent experience of a disease may increase the likelihood of it being diagnosed. |
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Cognitive bias: hindsight
| Knowing the outcome may profoundly influence the perception of past events and prevent an accurate appraisal of what actually occurred. |
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Cognitive bias: commission
| Tendency toward action rather than inaction. |
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Cognitive bias: omission
| Judging harmful commissions as worse than the corresponding omissions. |
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Cognitive bias: representativeness
| Overemphasizing evidence that strongly resembles a class of events. |
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Cognitive bias: relative risk
| Being more likely to choose an option when presented with the relative risk than the absolute risk. |
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Too much choice (alternatives)
| Choosing a given option more often when there are more alternatives. |