Cognitive biases associated with medical decisions: a systematic review
University of Zurich · Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
Abstract
Cognitive biases and personality traits (aversion to risk or ambiguity) may lead to diagnostic inaccuracies and medical errors resulting in mismanagement or inadequate utilization of resources. We conducted a systematic review with four objectives: 1) to identify the most common cognitive biases, 2) to evaluate the influence of cognitive biases on diagnostic accuracy or management errors, 3) to determine their impact on patient outcomes, and 4) to identify literature gaps.
We searched MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library databases for relevant articles on cognitive biases from 1980 to May 2015. We included studies conducted in physicians that evaluated at least one cognitive factor using case-vignettes or real scenarios and reported an associated outcome written in English. Data quality was assessed by the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. Among 114 publications, 20 studies comprising 6810 physicians met the inclusion criteria. Nineteen cognitive biases were identified.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 51.08
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 80
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Cognitive bias
- Overconfidence effect
- Cognition
- MEDLINE
- Clinical psychology
- Cochrane Library
- Medicine
- Meta-analysis