You have requested access to member only content.

Mental shortcuts, fallacies, and patient harm: How we make healthcare decisions drives patient outcomes

Do you ever think about how you think, or come to conclusions, or make decisions? It’s a Philosophy 101 question, but in the healthcare context it means examining how we make assumptions, skip steps, ignore details, and use flawed reasoning when diagnosing or treating a patient. And all those things, of course, have an impact on patient outcomes.

This isn’t a condemnation of healthcare workers—everyone subconsciously uses mental shortcuts in their daily decision making, says Bradley T. Truax, MD, principal consultant of the Truax Group. Otherwise, we’d be overloaded by thousands of daily choices, like the estimated 226.7 daily decisions we make on food alone. But when using those shortcuts, there are lower stakes in choosing between steak or salad than in making a diagnosis or coming up with a treatment plan.

This is an excerpt from members-only content. Please log in or become a member to access the full content.

Not a member? Let's fix that!

A membership to Accreditation and Quality Compliance Center provides accreditation and safety professionals with a collection of continuously updated tools, best-practice strategies, and compliance tips developed by industry experts. With two membership options, you can customize your access level depending on your education and training needs.

Register to access the free content available on the site or become a member today. Click here for more information.

For questions and support, please call customer service: 800-650-6787.