Differential Diagnosis Flashcards
Why not just go with your first guess?
- Especially for beginners, this is wrong too often
- The most common conditions are not typically the most serious and the consequences of missing a serious diagnosis are higher
- Initial guesses are particularly subject to the availability heuristic
availability heuristic
- Tendency to use information that comes to mind quickly and easily
- Favors recent or more memorable experiences
Why not just make a list of all possibilities?
- Takes a long time and tends to be a confusingly long list without the extra possibilities adding value
- Can lead to unnecessary testing/diagnostic work-up
Three things to consider for differential diagnosis
Probability
Prognosis
Pragmatism
Prognosis
“must-not-miss” conditions – which conditions are worst if left unconsidered
Pragmatism
what conditions have the best benefit: harm
ratio if treated
When to Start Considering
Generally done after gathering a bit of information about the chief concern
- Will let you work with a more holistic sense of the patient’s concern
- Will allow you to better compare it with your disease illness scripts
- You will update this list later as more information becomes available
- If you start too early, the list will tend to be pointlessly _____
long
Differential diagnosis allows for the possibility that the initial beliefs about the diagnosis were ________, facilitating better decision-making
incorrect
Differential diagnosis is aided by appropriate _________ __________
problem representation
T of F: Beginners may create excessively long or extremely shortlists based on misconceptions about medical diagnoses (e.g. “possibilism” and/or insufficient compensation for the availability heuristic)
True!