Assessing Decision Fatigue in General Practitioners' Prescribing Decisions Using the Australian BEACH Data Set.
Mona MaierDaniel PowellChristopher HarrisonJulie GordonPeter MurchieJulia L AllanPublished in: Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making (2024)
We found that as general practitioners progress through their workday, they become more likely to prescribe antibiotics that are reportedly overprescribed and less likely to prescribe statins and osteoporosis medications that are reportedly underprescribed.This change in decision making over time is consistent with the decision fatigue phenomenon. Decision fatigue occurs when we make many decisions without taking a rest break. As we make those decisions, we become gradually more likely to make decisions that are less difficult.The findings of this study show that decision fatigue is a possible target for improving guideline-compliant prescribing of pharmacologic medications.