Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, diagnostic decisions and diagnostic errors can have a severe impact on both patients and physicians. Little empirical research exists on regret experienced by physicians when they make diagnostic decisions in primary care that later prove inappropriate or incorrect. The aim of this study was to explore the experience of regret following diagnostic decisions in primary care. Methods: In this qualitative study, we used an online questionnaire on a sample of German primary care physicians. We asked participants to report on cases in which the final diagnosis differed from their original opinion, and in which treatment was at the very least delay...
Purpose: The relationship between faults in diagnostic reasoning, diagnostic errors, and patient har...
BACKGROUND: Clinicians involved in medical errors can experience significant distress. This study ai...
Background: Diagnostic errors often result in patient harm. Previous studies have shown that there i...
Background: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
BACKGROUND: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
Background Decision-making relies on both analytical and emotional thinking. Cognitive reasoning sty...
OBJECTIVE: We investigate the mechanisms of diagnostic error in primary care consultations to detect...
Introduction: Effective physician-patient communication is critical in cancer care. Breakdowns in co...
Background: Adverse effects of medical errors have received increasing attention. Diagnostic errors ...
Background: While primary care physicians (PCPs) play a key role in cancer detection, they can find ...
Patient safety is as an increasingly active field of research and policy in the UK and around the wo...
Contains fulltext : 98435.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND OR CO...
Abstract Background Diagnostic uncertainty is one of the largest contributory factors to the occurre...
BACKGROUND: How patients respond to medical errors may influence how physicians approach disclosure ...
This paper examines the role that regret does and should play in medical decision-making. I assess w...
Purpose: The relationship between faults in diagnostic reasoning, diagnostic errors, and patient har...
BACKGROUND: Clinicians involved in medical errors can experience significant distress. This study ai...
Background: Diagnostic errors often result in patient harm. Previous studies have shown that there i...
Background: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
BACKGROUND: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
Background Decision-making relies on both analytical and emotional thinking. Cognitive reasoning sty...
OBJECTIVE: We investigate the mechanisms of diagnostic error in primary care consultations to detect...
Introduction: Effective physician-patient communication is critical in cancer care. Breakdowns in co...
Background: Adverse effects of medical errors have received increasing attention. Diagnostic errors ...
Background: While primary care physicians (PCPs) play a key role in cancer detection, they can find ...
Patient safety is as an increasingly active field of research and policy in the UK and around the wo...
Contains fulltext : 98435.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND OR CO...
Abstract Background Diagnostic uncertainty is one of the largest contributory factors to the occurre...
BACKGROUND: How patients respond to medical errors may influence how physicians approach disclosure ...
This paper examines the role that regret does and should play in medical decision-making. I assess w...
Purpose: The relationship between faults in diagnostic reasoning, diagnostic errors, and patient har...
BACKGROUND: Clinicians involved in medical errors can experience significant distress. This study ai...
Background: Diagnostic errors often result in patient harm. Previous studies have shown that there i...