In diagnostic reasoning, especially in a clinical setting, practitioners often widely disagree about the causal explanation for a given case. Most studies have assumed that such disagreements result from judgmental mistakes due to biased reasoning, especially the tendency to seek confirmation for a theory or hypothesis they already entertain. Alternative explanations for these mistakes are: confusion about the type of requested diagnosis and a difference in knowledge available to the practitioner. The present paper introduces a method to control the latter two factors, for the first time enabling a study of the influence of the first factor in isolation. In the experiment, eighteen advanced postgraduate practitioners made a diagnosis in int...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the clinical reasoning characteristics of diagnos...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the clinical reasoning characteristics of diagnos...
PURPOSE: Diagnostic errors have been attributed to faulty reasoning and cognitive biases, but minimi...
Contains fulltext : 55625.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In diagnostic ...
There is a growing literature on diagnostic errors. The consensus of this literature is that most er...
A considerable amount of medical errors are indicated to occur during the diagnostic process. Variou...
O’Sullivan and Schofield gave an excellent summary of the problem of cognitive bias in the diagnosti...
Diagnostic errors account for more than 8% of adverse events in medicine and up to 30% of malpractic...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the types of errors in clinical reasoning that co...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the types of errors in clinical reasoning that co...
Several recent books have addressed "How Doctors Think," with emphasis on diagnostic decision making...
Diagnostic errors have been associated with bias in clinical reasoning. Empirical evidence on the co...
Background: Adverse effects of medical errors have received increasing attention. Diagnostic errors ...
notion that experts use mental frameworks or schemes, both to organize knowledge in memory and to so...
textabstractThis thesis focuses on the subject of cognitive diagnostic error in internal medicine; m...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the clinical reasoning characteristics of diagnos...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the clinical reasoning characteristics of diagnos...
PURPOSE: Diagnostic errors have been attributed to faulty reasoning and cognitive biases, but minimi...
Contains fulltext : 55625.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In diagnostic ...
There is a growing literature on diagnostic errors. The consensus of this literature is that most er...
A considerable amount of medical errors are indicated to occur during the diagnostic process. Variou...
O’Sullivan and Schofield gave an excellent summary of the problem of cognitive bias in the diagnosti...
Diagnostic errors account for more than 8% of adverse events in medicine and up to 30% of malpractic...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the types of errors in clinical reasoning that co...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the types of errors in clinical reasoning that co...
Several recent books have addressed "How Doctors Think," with emphasis on diagnostic decision making...
Diagnostic errors have been associated with bias in clinical reasoning. Empirical evidence on the co...
Background: Adverse effects of medical errors have received increasing attention. Diagnostic errors ...
notion that experts use mental frameworks or schemes, both to organize knowledge in memory and to so...
textabstractThis thesis focuses on the subject of cognitive diagnostic error in internal medicine; m...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the clinical reasoning characteristics of diagnos...
The aim of this study was to identify and describe the clinical reasoning characteristics of diagnos...
PURPOSE: Diagnostic errors have been attributed to faulty reasoning and cognitive biases, but minimi...