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Deliberate clinical inertia: Using meta-cognition to improve decision-making.

Gerben KeijzersDaniel Michael FatovichDiana Egerton-WarburtonLouise Ann CullenIan A ScottPaul GlasziouPat Croskerry
Published in: Emergency medicine Australasia : EMA (2018)
Deliberate clinical inertia is the art of doing nothing as a positive response. To be able to apply this concept, individual clinicians need to specifically focus on their clinical decision-making. The skill of solving problems and making optimal clinical decisions requires more attention in medical training and should play a more prominent part of the medical curriculum. This paper provides suggestions on how this may be achieved. Strategies to mitigate common biases are outlined, with an emphasis on reversing a 'more is better' culture towards more temperate, critical thinking. To incorporate such an approach in medical curricula and in clinical practice, institutional endorsement and support is required.
Keyphrases
  • decision making
  • healthcare
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  • working memory
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  • emergency medicine