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  2. To Err Is Human (report) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/To_Err_Is_Human_(report)

    The report was based upon analysis of multiple studies by a variety of organizations and concluded that between 44,000 to 98,000 people die each year as a result of preventable medical errors. For comparison, fewer than 50,000 people died of Alzheimer's disease and 17,000 died of illicit drug use in the same year. [1]

  3. List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases

    Levels-of-processing effect: That different methods of encoding information into memory have different levels of effectiveness. [161] List-length effect: A smaller percentage of items are remembered in a longer list, but as the length of the list increases, the absolute number of items remembered increases as well. [162] Memory inhibition

  4. Human error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_error

    A statue in Hartlepool, England, commemorating the "Hartlepool monkey", a primate who was mistaken by locals to be a French soldier and killed.. Some researchers have argued that the dichotomy of human actions as "correct" or "incorrect" is a harmful oversimplification of a complex phenomenon.

  5. Promoting Healthy Choices: Information vs. Convenience - HuffPost

    images.huffingtonpost.com/2012-12-21-promoting...

    In order to address this question, we compared the efficacy of two different types of interventions to change the food intake of fast food restaurant patrons, one that provides calorie information, mimicking the proposed legislature, and another that makes healthier meal choices marginally more convenient.

  6. Patient safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_safety

    With these errors, not only is there a likelihood of a prescription being wrong, but there is a $3.5 billion price tag that goes with that, covering the amount that people pay each year for litigation costs and extra days that patients need to stay in hospital beds because of mistakes from the hospital.

  7. Attribution bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribution_bias

    Thus, participants made different attributions about people depending on the information they had access to. Storms used these results to bolster his theory of cognitively-driven attribution biases; because people have no access to the world except through their own eyes, they are inevitably constrained and consequently prone to biases.

  8. Cognitive bias mitigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_bias_mitigation

    There are few studies explicitly linking cognitive biases to real-world incidents with highly negative outcomes. Examples: One study [11] explicitly focused on cognitive bias as a potential contributor to a disaster-level event; this study examined the causes of the loss of several members of two expedition teams on Mount Everest on two consecutive days in 1996.

  9. Mental health stigma is shifting. So why are adults ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/mental-health-stigma-shifting-why...

    For all adults in the second quarter of 2024, at least 1 in 10 people (13%) reported using mental health counseling in the past year, up from a little over 12% in 2022.

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