Treatment decision making Flashcards
Who discovered the Expected Utility theory?
Neumann and Morgentern 1947.
What is the expected utility theory?
(classical decision theory) an ideal of how people should make risky decisions based on probability axioms
Links choice with values, probability of each option
Normative theory
What is experiental-intuitive (heuristic)
SYSTEM 1
Fast thinking, automatic and resistant to change
What is analytic-systematic
SYSTEM 2
Slow thinking, effortful and open to change
What is transitivity?
If prefer A to B, B to C, then A to C.
What is invariance?
preference should not be affected by the presentation of options
Bounded Rationality
Simon 1995
Bounded rationality
we DON’T have the capacity to make decisions, and ALL people make similar errors in judgement
What is anchoring and adjustment?
reliant on one piece of info given to govern decisions and alter decision based on additional info
Heuristics
experienced-based techniques for problem solving (Same as experiential/intuitive decision making)
Elimination by aspects
Tversky
Graber et al (2002)
Noted three types of errors in diangosis:
No fault: silent disease, mimics, not known, poor quality data from the patient, etc.
System: culture left too long, missed appointment, unsupervised junior, delays in x-rays, etc.
Cognitive: misdiagnosis from poor data collection, interpretation, flawed reasoning, incomplete knowledge – BEING A HUMAN