Checklists to reduce diagnostic errors
- PMID: 21248608
- DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31820824cd
Checklists to reduce diagnostic errors
Abstract
Diagnostic errors are common and can often be traced to physicians' cognitive biases and failed heuristics (mental shortcuts). A great deal is known about how these faulty thinking processes lead to error, but little is known about how to prevent them. Faulty thinking plagues other high-risk, high-reliability professions, such as airline pilots and nuclear plant operators, but these professions have reduced errors by using checklists. Recently, checklists have gained acceptance in medical settings, such as operating rooms and intensive care units. This article extends the checklist concept to diagnosis and describes three types of checklists: (1) a general checklist that prompts physicians to optimize their cognitive approach, (2) a differential diagnosis checklist to help physicians avoid the most common cause of diagnostic error--failure to consider the correct diagnosis as a possibility, and (3) a checklist of common pitfalls and cognitive forcing functions to improve evaluation of selected diseases. These checklists were developed informally and have not been subjected to rigorous evaluation. The purpose of this article is to argue for the further investigation and revision of these initial attempts to apply checklists to the diagnostic process. The basic idea behind checklists is to provide an alternative to reliance on intuition and memory in clinical problem solving. This kind of solution is demanded by the complexity of diagnostic reasoning, which often involves sense-making under conditions of great uncertainty and limited time.
Comment in
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Commentary: Reducing diagnostic errors: another role for checklists?Acad Med. 2011 Mar;86(3):279-81. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3182082692. Acad Med. 2011. PMID: 21346432
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The Neuropsychiatric Effects of CNS Structural Abnormalities (NECSA) classification: An aid to differential diagnosis.Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2015 Oct;49(10):943. doi: 10.1177/0004867415597073. Epub 2015 Jul 24. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2015. PMID: 26209322 No abstract available.
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