| Literature DB >> 32334647 |
Donald A Redelmeier1, Eldar Shafir2.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32334647 PMCID: PMC7180015 DOI: 10.1016/S2468-2667(20)30096-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Public Health
Summary of pitfalls in judgment
| Fear of the unknown | Unknown risks attract more attention than do regular events | Provide repeated reminders after the initial shock fades | “We've been at it for a while, yet must be as vigilant as when it was all new.” |
| Personal embarrassment | Unintended personal lapses add to later self-blame or stigma | Acknowledge that this reaction is normal behaviour and use celebrity patients to lessen stigma | “This can happen to everybody. Tom Hanks acquired COVID-19 infection too.” |
| Neglect of competing risk | Prominent threats deflect attention from other risks | Stay mindful of mundane everyday hazards that can be overlooked | “This pandemic is not the only risk to your health that needs attention.” |
| Invisible diseases | Problems might be missed if objective data are absent | Guard against mental health complications | “Social distancing causes stress due to isolation. How are you coping?” |
| No clear feedback | Learning requires reliable follow-up | Avoid scrutinising rapidly fluctuating and unstable updates | “Focus on your own planned behaviour and not population statistics that change daily.” |
| Status quo bias | Strong desire to resist change | Emphasise potential future gains | “This crisis can help us to look at many things anew.” |
| Ingrained societal norms | Habits are difficult to change | Keep reminding and highlighting others who have changed behaviours | “Remember to avoid touching your face and politely correct those still doing it.” |
| Hindsight bias | Summary judgments are weighed by final outcomes | Avoid second guessing early attempts too harshly | “The pandemic was hard to predict and difficult to manage at the time.” |