Cognitive Biases in Health Care Tip Sheet

Clinical decisions often happen fast and under pressure. That is when cognitive biases can influence judgment, communication, and follow-through. This tip sheet provides a clear, quick-reference guide to help teams spot common thinking traps and apply simple safeguards that improve patient safety.

Who it’s for:

  • Physicians, nurses, and interdisciplinary care teams
  • Patient safety, risk management and quality leaders
  • Clinical educators, residency and training programs
  • Teams reviewing events, near misses and diagnostic concerns

What it can be used for

  • Supporting diagnostic safety and decision-making conversations
  • Improving case review quality
  • Building shared language around bias
  • Training leaders to coach teams during stressful, ambiguous situations

What’s Inside:

  • Situation: When bias is most likely (time pressure, handoffs, competing priorities)
  • Background: Common cognitive biases and how they show up in care delivery
  • Assessment: Red flags that bias may be affecting decisions or communication
  • Recommendations: Practical debiasing tactics (timeouts, second looks, structured checks)
     

Related Resources

On-Demand Educational Webinars
This webinar explores the value, methodology, and best practices for dissemination of the results of an Apparent Cause Analysis (ACA), conducts a…
CPHRM Exam Prep
The CPHRM Online Practice Exam: Clinical Patient Safety Domain, helps users identify their areas of uncertainty in clinical patient safety.
CPHRM Exam Prep
The guide helps prepare test-takers for clinical patient safety questions on the CPHRM Exam.
On-Demand Educational Webinars
In this panel discussion, top health care risk management and technology leaders discuss how early resolution approaches, like CRPs, can positively…
On-Demand Educational Webinars
Discover what efforts and innovative models hospitals and health systems are implementing to create physical and psychological safety, retention, and…
On-Demand Educational Webinars
Learn how to measure an organization’s culture of safety coupled with practices to implement “Just Culture."