Mangus CW, Mahajan P. Decision Making: Healthy Heuristics and Betraying Biases.
Crit Care Clin 2021;
38:37-49. [PMID:
34794630 DOI:
10.1016/j.ccc.2021.07.002]
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Abstract
Critical care settings are unpredictable, dynamic environments where clinicians face high decision density in suboptimal conditions (stress, time constraints, competing priorities). Experts have described two systems of human decision making: one fast and intuitive; the other slow and methodical. Heuristics, or mental shortcuts, a key feature of intuitive reasoning, are often accurate, applied instinctively, and essential for efficient diagnostic decision making. Heuristics are also prone to failures, or cognitive biases, which can lead to diagnostic errors. A variety of strategies have been proposed to mitigate biases; however, current understanding of such interventions to optimize diagnostic safety is still incomplete.
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