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Thinking Again

Reducing Cognitive Errors in Psychiatric Practice
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And although typical medical training calls for the learning, storing, and recalling of large amounts of information, few medical professionals receive instruction on how to recognize, anticipate, and avoid innate mechanisms that can easily lead to cognitive error.

Thinking Again: Reducing Cognitive Errors in Psychiatric Practice offers insight and direction into reducing the cognitive errors routinely made by mental health and other medical providers. Beyond professional satisfaction, the author argues that making this effort can lead to improved assessment, formulation, treatment planning, and patient outcomes.

Opening with four clinical vignettes that illustrate the range and variety of cognitive mistakes, this volume goes on to discuss the following:

• The brain’s neurocognitive processes • The merits and shortcomings of diverse methods of thought used in various forms of clinical reasoning • Challenges to clinical reasoning, including misuse of heuristics, groupthink, and overreliance on artificial intelligence • The effect of practitioner physical and mental health and activity on cognitive function • Practices for reducing cognitive error, from learning and applying metacognition to debiasing and seeking multisource feedback

In each chapter, readers will find a summary, list of key points, self-assessment questions, discussion topics for individual or group use, suggestions for further reading, and references to support the material.

The book closes with a thoughtful consideration of the ethical duty of mental health clinicians to be aware of and seek to reduce cognitive errors, modeling new behaviors for the good of patients and other practitioners alike.

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