Abstract

BackgroundAlthough a clinician may have the intention of carrying out strategies to reduce cognitive errors, this intention may not be realized especially under heavy workload situations or following a period of interruptions. Implementing strategies to reduce cognitive errors in clinical setting may be facilitated by a portable mnemonic in the form of a checklist.MethodsA 2-stage approach using both qualitative and quantitative methods was used in the development and evaluation of a mnemonic checklist. In the development stage, a focus-driven literature search and a face-to-face discussion with a content expert in cognitive errors were carried out. Categories of cognitive errors addressed and represented in the checklist were identified. In the judgment stage, the face and content validity of the categories of cognitive errors represented in the checklist were determined. This was accomplished through coding responses of a panel of experts in cognitive errors.ResultsFrom the development stage, a preliminary version of the checklist in the form of four questions represented by four specific letters was developed. The letter ‘T’ in the TWED checklist stands for ‘Threat’ (i.e., ‘is there any life or limb threat that I need to rule out in this patient?’), ‘W’ for ‘Wrong/What else’ (i.e., ‘What if I am wrong? What else could it be?’), ‘E’ for ‘evidences’ (i.e., ‘Do I have sufficient evidences to support or exclude this diagnosis?’), and ‘D’ for ‘dispositional factors’ (i.e., ‘is there any dispositional factor that influence my decision’). In the judgment stage, the content validity of most categories of cognitive errors addressed in the checklist was rated highly in terms of their relevance and representativeness (with modified kappa values ranging from 0.65 to 1.0). Based on the coding of responses from seven experts, this checklist was shown to be sufficiently comprehensive to activate the implementation intention of checking cognitive errors.ConclusionThe TWED checklist is a portable mnemonic checklist that can be used to activate implementation intentions for checking cognitive errors in clinical settings. While its mnemonic structure eases recall, its brevity makes it portable for quick application in every clinical case until it becomes habitual in daily clinical practice.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13104-016-2249-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • A clinician may have the intention of carrying out strategies to reduce cognitive errors, this intention may not be realized especially under heavy workload situations or following a period of interruptions

  • This paper describes the two-stage approach in the development and evaluation of such a mnemonic checklist with the objective of aiding prospective memory in checking cognitive errors

  • Six categories of common cognitive errors contributing to diagnostic errors were identified [9, 22]

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Summary

Introduction

A clinician may have the intention of carrying out strategies to reduce cognitive errors, this intention may not be realized especially under heavy workload situations or following a period of interruptions. Clinicians who are absorbed in highly demanding clinical tasks, such as managing emergency cases or having to attend to multiple patients at the same time may not remember to carry out the intention of minimizing cognitive errors. The clinician’s memory becomes increasingly unreliable leading to prospective memory failure especially if the intended task is not part of one’s routine activities [14, 17,18,19]. This intended task of reducing cognitive errors can become more attainable when a person explicitly incorporates specific implementation intentions in their clinical work [13]. Implementation intentions are the cognitive “if–” steps that serve to bridge the intention-implementation gap [13, 14]

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