
The Resus Room Decision Making; Roadside to Resus
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Mar 16, 2026 They unpack how clinicians make high-stakes choices in time-pressured, information-poor settings. They explore pre-test probability, prevalence, and when knowing how common a condition is changes care. They redefine what counts as a test and explain how evidence should shift risk estimates. They cover test harms, thresholds for testing versus treating, and how human factors shape real-world decisions.
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Decision Making Is The Foundation Of Every Clinical Act
- Decision making underpins every clinical action and requires orienting to the specific choice, its risks, benefits, and context.
- Simon Lang emphasises defining the decision (e.g., CXR, troponin, pad position) and weighing risks of acting vs not acting.
Use Pre-Test Probability Not Just Pattern Recognition
- Pre-test probability (baseline risk) must inform whether you test or treat, not just pattern recognition or list of red flags.
- James Yates cites DASH-ED, AHEAD and ACS data showing wide variation in baseline risks (e.g., 1/330 AAS, ~6% anticoagulated head injury, 6–15% ACS).
Treat History And Exam Findings As Valid Tests
- Treat any question or observation that meaningfully shifts diagnostic probability as a test, including history and exam.
- Rob Fenwick gives examples: duration of RIF pain and how a patient's appearance or reproducible chest wall pain change likelihoods.
