Clinical Reasoning - Thinking Fast & Slow
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System 1 (Fast): Intuitive, automatic, pattern-recognition. Used for most routine encounters. It's efficient but prone to cognitive biases.
- Anchoring Bias: Over-relying on initial information.
- Availability Heuristic: Judging likelihood by how easily examples come to mind.
- Confirmation Bias: Seeking data that confirms a hypothesis.
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System 2 (Slow): Deliberate, analytical, and resource-intensive. Engaged for complex problems, atypical presentations, or to double-check System 1.
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Cognitive Debiasing: The core strategy is metacognition-thinking about your own thinking. Force a "diagnostic time-out" to deliberately engage System 2.
⭐ Premature closure (a form of anchoring bias), where the diagnostic workup is stopped too early, is one of the most common causes of diagnostic error.

Differential Diagnosis - The VINDICATE Game
A systematic framework to ensure a comprehensive differential diagnosis (DDx), especially for complex presentations. It's a powerful tool to combat premature closure and diagnostic errors by forcing consideration of a wide range of etiologies.
📌 VINDICATE Mnemonic:
- Vascular (ischemia, infarction, hemorrhage)
- Inflammatory / Infectious
- Neoplastic (primary or metastatic)
- Degenerative / Deficiency
- Iatrogenic / Idiopathic / Intoxication
- Congenital
- Autoimmune / Allergic
- Traumatic
- Endocrine / Metabolic

⭐ When assessing a patient with altered mental status, VINDICATE is crucial. It prompts consideration of often-missed causes like Wernicke's encephalopathy (Thiamine B1 deficiency), fitting under the 'Degenerative/Deficiency' category, which is reversible with timely treatment.
Evidence-Based Medicine - Numbers Don't Lie
- Core Principle: Integrates clinical expertise, patient values, and the best research evidence into decision-making.
- The 5 A's of EBM: A cyclical process for patient care.
- Key Metrics for Diagnostic Tests:
- Sensitivity: $TP / (TP + FN)$ 📌 SNOUT: Sensitive test, when Negative, rules OUT disease.
- Specificity: $TN / (TN + FP)$ 📌 SPIN: Specific test, when Positive, rules IN disease.
- Likelihood Ratio (LR):
- Positive (LR+): $Sensitivity / (1 - Specificity)$
- Negative (LR-): $(1 - Sensitivity) / Specificity$
⭐ High-Yield: Likelihood ratios are powerful tools. A high LR+ (e.g., >10) significantly ↑ post-test probability, while a low LR- (e.g., <0.1) significantly ↓ it, regardless of pre-test probability.
Cognitive Biases - Mind Traps & Pitfalls
Systematic errors in thinking that affect clinical judgment. Awareness and active reflection are crucial for mitigation.
- Anchoring Bias: Over-relying on initial information.
- Availability Heuristic: Overestimating likelihood of diagnoses that are easily recalled.
- Confirmation Bias: Seeking evidence that confirms a pre-existing belief.
- Premature Closure: Accepting a diagnosis before it is fully verified.
⭐ The availability heuristic often leads to misdiagnosis of common presentations with rare diseases that were recently seen or publicized.
- The PICO framework (Patient, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome) is essential for framing clinical questions.
- Prioritize evidence from systematic reviews and meta-analyses, the highest tier of the evidence pyramid.
- Use Likelihood Ratios (LRs) to update pre-test probability to a more accurate post-test probability.
- An LR+ >10 or LR- <0.1 provides strong evidence to rule in or rule out a diagnosis.
- Always integrate evidence with clinical expertise and the patient's values and preferences.
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