Do You Believe in Magic? Shove, Don’t Nudge: Advising Patients at the Bedside

Journal of Clinical Ethics 31 (1):76-78 (2020)
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Abstract

Magical thinking, distortions of reality based on fantasy, are pervasive in society and may influence patients’ healthcare decisions. These distortions can “nudge” people to make decisions using System 1 thinking (a heuristic and error-prone decisional pathway that is always “on”), rather than a slower, deliberative, and more labor-intensive process that evaluates evidence (System 2). Physicians have been castigated for subtly nudging their patients toward evidence-based decisions. Yet when patients demonstrate magical thinking in their decision making, physicians have a professional responsibility to do more than nudge; they should shove patients toward decisions that will most likely achieve the healthcare goals they seek.

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