Helfrich Christian D, Rose Adam J, Hartmann Christine W, van Bodegom-Vos Leti, Graham Ian D, Wood Suzanne J, Majerczyk Barbara R, Good Chester B, Pogach Leonard M, Ball Sherry L, Au David H, Aron David C
VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Department of Veterans Affairs, Seattle, USA.
Department of Health Services, University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, USA.
J Eval Clin Pract. 2018 Feb;24(1):198-205. doi: 10.1111/jep.12855. Epub 2018 Jan 5.
One way to understand medical overuse at the clinician level is in terms of clinical decision-making processes that are normally adaptive but become maladaptive. In psychology, dual process models of cognition propose 2 decision-making processes. Reflective cognition is a conscious process of evaluating options based on some combination of utility, risk, capabilities, and/or social influences. Automatic cognition is a largely unconscious process occurring in response to environmental or emotive cues based on previously learned, ingrained heuristics. De-implementation strategies directed at clinicians may be conceptualized as corresponding to cognition: (1) a process of unlearning based on reflective cognition and (2) a process of substitution based on automatic cognition.
We define unlearning as a process in which clinicians consciously change their knowledge, beliefs, and intentions about an ineffective practice and alter their behaviour accordingly. Unlearning has been described as "the questioning of established knowledge, habits, beliefs and assumptions as a prerequisite to identifying inappropriate or obsolete knowledge underpinning and/or embedded in existing practices and routines." We hypothesize that as an unintended consequence of unlearning strategies clinicians may experience "reactance," ie, feel their professional prerogative is being violated and, consequently, increase their commitment to the ineffective practice. We define substitution as replacing the ineffective practice with one or more alternatives. A substitute is a specific alternative action or decision that either precludes the ineffective practice or makes it less likely to occur. Both approaches may work independently, eg, a substitute could displace an ineffective practice without changing clinicians' knowledge, and unlearning could occur even if no alternative exists. For some clinical practice, unlearning and substitution strategies may be most effectively used together.
By taking into account the dual process model of cognition, we may be able to design de-implementation strategies matched to clinicians' decision-making processes and avoid unintended consequence.
在临床医生层面理解医疗过度使用的一种方式是从通常具有适应性但会变得适应不良的临床决策过程角度来看。在心理学中,认知双过程模型提出了两种决策过程。反思性认知是一个基于效用、风险、能力和/或社会影响的某种组合来评估选项的有意识过程。自动认知是一个很大程度上无意识的过程,它基于先前学到的、根深蒂固的启发式方法,对环境或情感线索做出反应。针对临床医生的去实施策略可以被概念化为与认知相对应:(1)基于反思性认知的忘却过程,以及(2)基于自动认知的替代过程。
我们将忘却定义为临床医生有意识地改变他们关于无效实践的知识、信念和意图,并相应改变其行为的过程。忘却被描述为“对既定知识、习惯、信念和假设提出质疑,作为识别支撑和/或嵌入现有实践和常规中的不适当或过时知识的先决条件”。我们假设,作为忘却策略的意外后果,临床医生可能会经历“逆反心理”,即感觉他们的专业特权受到侵犯,从而增加他们对无效实践的坚持。我们将替代定义为用一个或多个替代方案取代无效实践。替代物是一种特定的替代行动或决策,它要么排除了无效实践,要么使其发生的可能性降低。这两种方法可能独立起作用,例如,替代物可以在不改变临床医生知识的情况下取代无效实践,即使没有替代方案,忘却也可能发生。对于某些临床实践,忘却和替代策略可能最有效地一起使用。
通过考虑认知双过程模型,我们或许能够设计出与临床医生决策过程相匹配的去实施策略,并避免意外后果。