Publication | Closed Access
How psychiatrists think
55
Citations
26
References
2009
Year
Psychiatric EvaluationClinical Decision-makingCognitionMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesMedical Decision MakingHeuristics ’Clinical PsychologyCognitive ScienceCognitive ErrorPsychiatryCognitive FunctionClinical PsychiatryHuman ErrorHeuristics ResultsPsychotic DisorderCognitive PerformanceCultural PsychiatryMedicinePsychopathology
Summary Over the past decade, the study of error in medicine has expanded to incorporate new insights from cognitive psychology, generating increased research and clinical interest in cognitive errors and clinical decision-making. The study of cognitive error focuses on predictable errors in thinking that result from the use of cognitive shortcuts or ‘heuristics’. Heuristics reduce the time, resources and cognitive effort required for clinical decision-making and are a feature of mature clinical thinking. Heuristics can also lead to bias and must be used with an awareness of their weaknesses. In this article, we describe heuristics commonly used in clinical decision-making and discuss how failure of heuristics results in cognitive error. We apply research findings on decision-making in medicine to decision-making in psychiatry and suggest directions for training and future research into cognitive error in psychiatry.
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