改善精神病学临床决策:数字表型的实施可以减轻患者和医生个体认知偏差的影响。

IF 8.3 2区 医学 Q1 Medicine Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience Pub Date : 2022-06-01 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1080/19585969.2022.2042165
Stéphane Mouchabac, Ismael Conejero, Camille Lakhlifi, Ilyass Msellek, Leo Malandain, Vladimir Adrien, Florian Ferreri, Bruno Millet, Olivier Bonnot, Alexis Bourla, Redwan Maatoug
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引用次数: 7

摘要

精神病学高风险的临床选择可能受到外部不相关因素的影响。对临床推理和决策中涉及的认知和行为机制的深刻理解是提高医疗质量的基础。事实上,临床实践中的决定可能受到错误或近似的影响,这些错误或近似可能影响诊断,进而影响预后:人为因素造成很大比例的医疗错误,通常是认知错误。患者和临床医生的认知偏差都会在不同的时间点影响决策过程。从患者的角度来看,向精神科医生报告的显性症状和数据的质量可能受到影响注意力、知觉或记忆的认知偏差的影响。从临床医生的角度来看,各种各样的推理和决策陷阱可能会影响对患者提供的信息的解释。随着个人技术越来越多地融入人类生活,一种名为“数字表型”的新概念基于收集人类行为的实时标记以确定“病理的数字签名”的想法。事实上,这一策略依赖于这样一种假设,即行为是“可量化的”,从通过连接工具(智能手机、数字传感器和可穿戴设备)提取和分析的数据中推断出一种“电子符号学”。在本文中,我们假设实施数字表型可以通过减轻患者和医生个人认知偏见的影响来改善临床推理和决策结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Improving clinical decision-making in psychiatry: implementation of digital phenotyping could mitigate the influence of patient's and practitioner's individual cognitive biases.

High stake clinical choices in psychiatry can be impacted by external irrelevant factors. A strong understanding of the cognitive and behavioural mechanisms involved in clinical reasoning and decision-making is fundamental in improving healthcare quality. Indeed, the decision in clinical practice can be influenced by errors or approximations which can affect the diagnosis and, by extension, the prognosis: human factors are responsible for a significant proportion of medical errors, often of cognitive origin. Both patient's and clinician's cognitive biases can affect decision-making procedures at different time points. From the patient's point of view, the quality of explicit symptoms and data reported to the psychiatrist might be affected by cognitive biases affecting attention, perception or memory. From the clinician's point of view, a variety of reasoning and decision-making pitfalls might affect the interpretation of information provided by the patient. As personal technology becomes increasingly embedded in human lives, a new concept called digital phenotyping is based on the idea of collecting real-time markers of human behaviour in order to determine the 'digital signature of a pathology'. Indeed, this strategy relies on the assumption that behaviours are 'quantifiable' from data extracted and analysed through connected tools (smartphone, digital sensors and wearable devices) to deduce an 'e-semiology'. In this article, we postulate that implementing digital phenotyping could improve clinical reasoning and decision-making outcomes by mitigating the influence of patient's and practitioner's individual cognitive biases.

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来源期刊
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
19.30
自引率
1.20%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience (DCNS) endeavors to bridge the gap between clinical neuropsychiatry and the neurosciences by offering state-of-the-art information and original insights into pertinent clinical, biological, and therapeutic aspects. As an open access journal, DCNS ensures accessibility to its content for all interested parties. Each issue is curated to include expert reviews, original articles, and brief reports, carefully selected to offer a comprehensive understanding of the evolving landscape in clinical neuroscience. Join us in advancing knowledge and fostering dialogue in this dynamic field.
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