4.6 Article

Affective forecasting: An unrecognized challenge in making serious health decisions

期刊

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
卷 23, 期 10, 页码 1708-1712

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-008-0719-5

关键词

decision-making; communication; patient preferences; doctor-patient relationship; quality of life

资金

  1. Greenwall Foundation Faculty Scholar's
  2. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
  3. National Institute of Mental Health
  4. Ladies Hospital Aid Society of Western Pennsylvania
  5. Jewish Health Care Foundation
  6. National Center for Palliative Care Research
  7. LAS Trust Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Patients facing medical decisions that will impact quality of life make assumptions about how they will adjust emotionally to living with health declines and disability. Despite abundant research on decision-making, we have no direct research on how accurately patients envision their future well-being and how this influences their decisions. Outside medicine, psychological research on affective forecasting consistently shows that people poorly predict their future ability to adapt to adversity. This finding is important for medicine, since many serious health decisions hinge on quality-of-life judgments. We describe three specific mechanisms for affective forecasting errors that may influence health decisions: focalism, in which people focus more on what will change than on what will stay the same; immune neglect, in which they fail to envision how their own coping skills will lessen their unhappiness; and failure to predict adaptation, in which people fail to envision shifts in what they value. We discuss emotional and social factors that interact with these cognitive biases. We describe how caregivers can recognize these biases in the clinical setting and suggest interventions to help patients recognize and address affective forecasting errors.

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