Cognitive Biases and Shared Decision Making in Acute Brain Injury.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Seminars in Neurology Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-04 DOI:10.1055/s-0043-1775596
Alexis Steinberg, Baruch Fischhoff
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Abstract

Many patients hospitalized after severe acute brain injury are comatose and require life-sustaining therapies. Some of these patients make favorable recoveries with continued intensive care, while others do not. In addition to providing medical care, clinicians must guide surrogate decision makers through high-stakes, emotionally charged decisions about whether to continue life-sustaining therapies. These consultations require clinicians first to assess a patient's likelihood of recovery given continued life-sustaining therapies (i.e., prognosticate), then to communicate that prediction to surrogates, and, finally, to elicit and interpret the patient's preferences. At each step, both clinicians and surrogates are vulnerable to flawed decision making. Clinicians can be imprecise, biased, and overconfident when prognosticating after brain injury. Surrogates can misperceive the choice and misunderstand or misrepresent a patient's wishes, which may never have been communicated clearly. These biases can undermine the ability to reach choices congruent with patients' preferences through shared decision making (SDM). Decision science has extensively studied these biases. In this article, we apply that research to improving SDM for patients who are comatose after acute brain injury. After introducing SDM and the medical context, we describe principal decision science results as they relate to neurologic prognostication and end-of-life decisions, by both clinicians and surrogates. Based on research regarding general processes that can produce imprecise, biased, and overconfident prognoses, we propose interventions that could improve SDM, supporting clinicians and surrogates in making these challenging decisions.

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急性脑损伤的认知偏差与共同决策。
许多在严重急性脑损伤后住院的患者处于昏迷状态,需要维持生命的治疗。其中一些患者在持续的重症监护下恢复良好,而另一些则不然。除了提供医疗护理外,临床医生还必须指导替代决策者做出高风险、情绪化的决定,决定是否继续维持生命的治疗。这些咨询要求临床医生首先评估患者在接受持续生命维持治疗(即预测)后康复的可能性,然后将预测传达给代理人,最后,引出并解释患者的偏好。在每一步中,临床医生和代理人都容易受到决策失误的影响。临床医生在预测脑损伤后的预后时可能不精确、有偏见和过于自信。代孕者可能会误解患者的选择,误解或歪曲患者的意愿,而这些意愿可能从未得到明确传达。这些偏见会破坏通过共享决策(SDM)达成与患者偏好一致的选择的能力。决策科学对这些偏见进行了广泛的研究。在这篇文章中,我们将这项研究应用于改善急性脑损伤后昏迷患者的SDM。在介绍了SDM和医学背景后,我们描述了临床医生和代理人的主要决策科学结果,因为它们与神经预测和临终决策有关。基于对可能产生不精确、有偏见和过度自信预测的一般过程的研究,我们提出了可以改善SDM的干预措施,支持临床医生和代理人做出这些具有挑战性的决定。
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来源期刊
Seminars in Neurology
Seminars in Neurology 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
3.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Seminars in Neurology is a review journal on current trends in the evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of neurological diseases. Areas of coverage include multiple sclerosis, central nervous system infections, muscular dystrophy, neuro-immunology, spinal disorders, strokes, epilepsy, motor neuron diseases, movement disorders, higher cortical function, neuro-genetics and neuro-ophthamology. Each issue is presented under the direction of an expert guest editor, and invited contributors focus on a single, high-interest clinical topic. Up-to-the-minute coverage of the latest information in the field makes this journal an invaluable resource for neurologists and residents.
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