K Henriksen, H Kaplan - Quality and Safety in Health Care, 2003 - qshc.bmj.com The ubiquitous nature of hindsight bias is a cause for concern for those engaged
in investigations and retrospective analysis of medical error. Hindsight does
not equal foresight. Investigations that are anchored to outcome knowledge ... Cited by 41 - Related articles - All 7 versions
TB Hugh, GD Tracy - Medical Journal of Australia, 2002 - mja.com.au All real decisions are made under uncertainty. A decision is therefore a bet,
and evaluating it as good or not must depend on the stakes and the odds, not on
the outcome. —Edwards, 19841 MALPRACTICE LITIGATION costs are a ... Cited by 15 - Related articles - View as HTML - BL Direct - All 5 versions
CJ McDonald, M Weiner, SL Hui - JAMA: the journal of the American Medical Association, 2000 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 1: JAMA. 2000 Nov 1;284(17):2187. How many deaths are due to medical errors?
McDonald CJ, Weiner M, Hui SL. Regenstrief Institute ... Cited by 5 - Related articles
- ►bmj.com [PDF] JM Flach - British Medical Journal, 2003 - qshc.bmj.com One major difference between historical and nonhistorical judgment is that the
historical judge typically knows how things turned out. In Experiment 1, receipt
of such outcome knowledge was found to increase the postdicted likelihood ... Cited by 5 - Related articles - All 5 versions
RA Caplan, KL Posner, FW Cheney - Jama, 1991 - Am Med Assoc Is a permanent injury more likely to elicit a rating of inappropriate care than
a temporary injury? To explore this question, we asked 112 practicing
anesthesiologists to judge the appropriateness of care in 21 cases ... Cited by 241 - Related articles - All 4 versions
- ►psu.edu [PDF] RL Wears, CP Nemeth - Annals of emergency medicine, 2007 - Elsevier Reviews of malpractice claims have a morbid attraction that is similar to gazing
at crash scenes. Both provide the observer with a vicarious, cathartic
experience. These stories of tragedy, defeat, and loss seem almost as ... Cited by 11 - Related articles - All 20 versions
AA White, SW Wright, R Blanco, B Lemonds, J … - Academic Emergency Medicine, 2004 - mc.vanderbilt.edu Abstract Objectives: Identifying the etiologies of adverse outcomes is an
important first step in improving patient safety and reducing malpractice risks.
However, relatively little is known about the causes of emergency ... Cited by 14 - Related articles - View as HTML - BL Direct - All 6 versions
A Winman - Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 1997 - interscience.wiley.com This study was designed to investigate the effects of item sampling on hindsight
bias in experiments using general knowledge material. The results show that the
use of random versus traditional experimenter-selected item samples can ... Cited by 24 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 4 versions