2020
DOI: 10.5435/jaaos-d-20-00620
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Cognitive Biases in Orthopaedic Surgery

Abstract: Introduction: Cognitive biases are known to affect all aspects of human decision-making and reasoning. Examples include misjudgment of probability, preferential attention to evidence that confirms one's beliefs, and preference for certainty. It is not known whether cognitive biases influence orthopaedic surgeon decision-making. This study measured the influence of a few cognitive biases on orthopaedic decision-making in hypothetical vignettes. The questions we addressed were as follows: Do orthopae… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…7 Cognitive biases are well known to influence decision-making. Recently, Janssen et al 17 reported that 50% of orthopaedic surgeons are prone to commit confirmation bias. Myside bias is another very common type of cognitive bias, and surgeons tend to prefer to process information that confirms their own previous beliefs, opinions, and attitudes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 Cognitive biases are well known to influence decision-making. Recently, Janssen et al 17 reported that 50% of orthopaedic surgeons are prone to commit confirmation bias. Myside bias is another very common type of cognitive bias, and surgeons tend to prefer to process information that confirms their own previous beliefs, opinions, and attitudes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…24 In this context, cognitive bias (in particular the anchoring effect) can impact decision making for patients. 25 Similar to what is observed in patients with rotator cuff tears (the idea that the patient has a "tear" and that "it needs to be fixed"), these misconceptions can be reinforced by online information sources. 26 Ultimately, the surgeon's role is to aid in reorienting or redirecting patients with misconceptions regarding their DBT injury or treatment options; however, this can be more difficult in the face of poor online information.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Outlier surgeons who offer surgery based on magnitude of incapability rather than severity of pathology may not adequately account for the nuances of diagnostic science and the complexities of the biopsychosocial paradigm of human illness. These possibilities suggest several lines of investigation: (1) The relative influence of symptom intensity and pathology severity on surgeon treatment recommendations in actual patient care settings, (2) the relative understanding and accounting for the nuances of diagnostic science in developing health strategies [3,19,36], (3) the effectiveness of health strategies developed to limit surgeon-to-surgeon variation based on relative credulity in the face of limited objective evidence and therefore low probability of notable pathology, and (4) the relative influence of nonspecific effects of treatment when symptoms/incapability far outweigh pathophysiology in the decision to offer and accept operative treatment (simulated surgery controlled trials).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%