Image Theory's counting rule in clinical decision making: Does it describe how clinicians make patient-specific forecasts?

被引:0
|
作者
Falzer, Paul R. [1 ]
Garman, D. Melissa [1 ]
机构
[1] VA Connecticut Healthcare Syst, Clin Epidemiol Res Ctr, West Haven, CT 06516 USA
来源
JUDGMENT AND DECISION MAKING | 2012年 / 7卷 / 03期
关键词
decision making; clinical judgment; forecasting; evidence based medicine; treatment guidelines; patient-centered care; clinical training; naturalistic decision making; mental illness; schizophrenia; EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE; RESEARCH-TEAM PORT; PRACTICE GUIDELINES; FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES; SCHIZOPHRENIA; CARE; IMPLEMENTATION; QUALITY; MODEL; BIAS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The field of clinical decision making is polarized by two predominate views. One holds that treatment recommendations should conform with guidelines; the other emphasizes clinical expertise in reaching case-specific judgments. Previous work developed a test for a proposed alternative, that clinical judgment should systematically incorporate both general knowledge and patient-specific information. The test was derived from image theory's two phase-account of decision making and its "simple counting rule", which describes how possible courses of action are pre-screened for compatibility with standards and values. The current paper applies this rule to clinical forecasting, where practitioners indicate how likely a specific patient will respond favorably to a recommended treatment. Psychiatric trainees evaluated eight case vignettes that exhibited from 0 to 3 incompatible attributes. They made two forecasts, one based on a guideline recommendation, the other based on their own alternative. Both forecasts were predicted by equally-and unequally-weighted counting rules. Unequal weighting provided a better fit and exhibited a clearer rejection threshold, or point at which forecasts are not diminished by additional incompatibilities. The hypothesis that missing information is treated as an incompatibility was not confirmed. There was evidence that the rejection threshold was influenced by clinician preference. Results suggests that guidelines may have a de-biasing influence on clinical judgment. Subject to limitations pertaining to the subject sample and population, clinical paradigm, guideline, and study procedure, the data support the use of a compatibility test to describe how clinicians make patient-specific forecasts.
引用
收藏
页码:268 / 281
页数:14
相关论文
共 3 条
  • [1] Clinical decision support of radiotherapy treatment planning: A data-driven machine learning strategy for patient-specific dosimetric decision making
    Valdes, Gilmer
    Simone, Charles B., II
    Chen, Josephine
    Lin, Alexander
    Yom, Sue S.
    Pattison, Adam J.
    Carpenter, Colin M.
    Solberg, Timothy D.
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2017, 125 (03) : 392 - 397
  • [2] How does an Alzheimer's disease patient's role in medical decision making change over time?
    Hirschman, KB
    Xie, SX
    Feudtner, C
    Karlawish, JHT
    JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY AND NEUROLOGY, 2004, 17 (02) : 55 - 60
  • [3] How do clinicians rate patient's performance status using the ECOG performance scale? A mixed-methods exploration of variability in decision-making in oncology
    Datta, Soumitra S.
    Ghosal, Niladri
    Daruvala, Rhea
    Chakraborty, Santam
    Shrimali, Raj Kumar
    van Zanten, Chantalle
    Parry, Joe
    Agrawal, Sanjit
    Atreya, Shrikant
    Sinha, Subir
    Chatterjee, Sanjoy
    Gollins, Simon
    ECANCERMEDICALSCIENCE, 2019, 13