4.7 Article

The cognitive psychology of missed diagnoses

Journal

ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 142, Issue 2, Pages 115-120

Publisher

AMER COLL PHYSICIANS
DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-142-2-200501180-00010

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Cognitive psychology is the science that examines how people reason, formulate judgments, and make decisions. This case involves a patient given a diagnosis of pharyngitis, whose ultimate diagnosis of osteomyelitis was missed through a series of cognitive shortcuts. These errors include the availability heuristic (in which people judge likelihood by how easily examples spring to mind), the anchoring heuristic (in which people stick with initial impressions), framing effects (in which people make different decisions depending on how information is presented), blind obedience (in which people stop thinking when confronted with authority), and premature closure (in which several alternatives are not pursued). Rather than trying to completely eliminate cognitive shortcuts (which often serve clinicians well), becoming aware of common errors might lead to sustained improvement in patient care.

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