International Journal of General Medicine (Apr 2023)

DECLARE: A Comprehensive, Multifaceted Cognitive Forcing Strategy to Confront Complex Cases

  • Shimizu T

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 16
pp. 1505 – 1511

Abstract

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Taro Shimizu Department of Diagnostic and Generalist Medicine, Dokkyo Medical University Hospital, Mibu, Tochigi, JapanCorrespondence: Taro Shimizu, Department of Diagnostic and Generalist Medicine, Dokkyo Medical University Hospital, Dokkyo Medical University, Graduate School of Medicine, Kitakobayashi 880, Mibu, Tochigi, 321-0293, Japan, Email [email protected]: Diagnostic excellence is an important goal in medicine. The enhancement of clinical reasoning skills of physicians, which is at the core of this concept, is a significant challenge. To achieve this improvement, it is necessary to enhance the ability to collect patient history information and to integrate the information. Additionally, the complexity of diagnosis is confounded by biases, noise, uncertainty, and contextual factors, and the impact of these factors is particularly prominent in complex cases. In such cases, the dual process theory, which is a classical reasoning measure, alone is insufficient to cope with these challenges, and a multifaceted and comprehensive approach is required to supplement its limitations. Therefore, the author presents six concrete steps, represented by the acronym DECLARE (Decomposition, Extraction, Causation Link, Assessing Accountability, Recomposition, Explanation and Exploration), that implement the concept of cognitive forcing strategy that has been shown to be effective in bias control, and include reflection, meta-cognition, and the recently popularized decision hygiene procedure. DECLARE is a strategy that should be deployed when faced with more complex diagnostic scenarios. By examining each of the six steps that comprise DECLARE individually, cognitive load can be reduced. Furthermore, by verifying causation and accountability when constructing diagnostic hypotheses, biases can be mitigated, which can also help to address noise and uncertainty, leading to an improvement in the quality of diagnosis and effectiveness in medical education.Keywords: diagnostic excellence, diagnostic strategy, meta-cognition, reflection, causal inference, decision hygiene

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