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Projection in surrogate decisions about life-sustaining medical treatments.
271
Citations
48
References
2001
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingClinical Decision-makingSocial PsychologyIndividual Decision MakingPsychologySocial SciencesSurrogate Decision MakingMedical Decision MakingExperimental Decision MakingBiasSurrogate Decision MakersPublic HealthDecision TheoryBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceSurrogate DecisionsHealth PolicyOutcomes ResearchSurrogate PredictionsApplied Social PsychologyExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionBehavioral EconomicsPalliative CareMedical EthicsEnd-of-life IssueDecision Science
To honor the wishes of an incapacitated patient, surrogate decision makers must predict the treatment decisions patients would make for themselves if able. Social psychological research, however, suggests that surrogates' own treatment preferences may influence their predictions of others' preferences. In 2 studies (1 involving 60 college student surrogates and a parent, the other involving 361 elderly outpatients and their chosen surrogate decision maker), surrogates predicted whether a close other would want life-sustaining treatment in hypothetical end-of-life scenarios and stated their own treatment preferences in the same scenarios. Surrogate predictions more closely resembled surrogates' own treatment wishes than they did the wishes of the individual they were trying to predict. Although the majority of prediction errors reflected inaccurate use of surrogates' own treatment preferences, projection was also found to result in accurate prediction more often than counterprojective predictions. The rationality and accuracy of projection in surrogate decision making is discussed.
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