Cognitive Errors

I have definitely committed my fair share of cognitive errors resulting in missed diagnoses. The first step is to be aware of these cognitive biases so we can avoid them. I have listed some of the most common ones below and broken them down into sections. 

Over-attachment to a specific diagnosis

Anchoring- Fixating on specific features of a presentation too early in the diagnostic process and subsequent failure to adjust

Confirmation bias- The tendency to look for confirming evidence to support the hypothesis while overlooking and evidence that refutes it

Premature closure- Accepting a diagnosis before it has been fully verified

Failure to consider alternative diagnoses

Sutton’s slip- Fixation on the most obvious answer

Search satisfaction- The tendency to stop searching once something is found and not considering additional diagnoses (i.e. the first positive finding was a red herring).

Representativeness restraint- Not considering a particular diagnosis for a patient because the presentation is not representative enough, i.e. it is not a “classic” presentation 

Error due to inheriting someone else’s thought process

Triage cueing- A predisposition toward a diagnosis as a result of a judgment made by the triage physician, whose care may have been brief and early in the care process

Diagnosis momentum- The tendency for a particular diagnosis to become established in spite of other evidence

Framing effect- A decision being influenced by the way in which the scenario is presented or ‘‘framed’

Ascertainment effect- When thinking is preshaped by expectations. The alcoholic is just drunk (but may actually be herniating from ICH)

Errors in prevalence estimation

Availability bias- The tendency for things to be thought of and placed on the differential more frequently if they come to the mind more easily

Base-rate neglect-  Failing to accurately take into account the prevalence of a particular disease

Gambler’s fallacy- Belief the same thing won’t happen again

Playing the odds- Deciding a patient doesn’t have a disease based on low likelihood and prevalence

Posterior probability error- Having a decision unduly influenced by a previous case

Errors involving patient characteristics

Gender bias- When the decision made is influenced unduly by the patient’s gender or the gender of the decision maker

Psych out error- A variety of biases associated with the health care provider’s perception of the psychiatric patient and blaming new organic disease on chronic psychiatric illness

Yin-yang out- Presumption that extensive prior investigation has ruled out any serious diagnosis on the current presentation. Beware of dismissing high utilizers. 

Errors associated with physician affect or personality

Order effects- Focusing on information given at the beginning or end of a history and missing key information in the middle

Commission bias- Tendency toward action rather than inaction (over investigation, over intervention etc…)

Omission bias- Tendency toward inaction rather than action (under investigation etc…)

Outcome bias- Choosing a course of action according to a desired outcome and avoiding diagnoses that could lead to an undesirable outcome. 

Visceral bias- Making decisions influenced by personal (positive or negative) feelings toward patients

Overconfidence/under-confidence- Being overconfident in or under-confident in the efficacy of decisions

Sunk costs- Unwillingness to give up a diagnosis in which considerable time and effort has been invested

Zebra retreat- Not willing to pursue rare diagnoses for a variety of reasons (delay in departmental flow, time intensive workup etc…)


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