Commentary Stop the silent misdiagnosis: patients' preferences matter. Citation Text: Mulley AG, Trimble C, Elwyn G. Stop the silent misdiagnosis: patients' preferences matter. BMJ. 2012;345:e6572. doi:10.1136/bmj.e6572. Copy Citation Format: DOIGoogle ScholarPubMedBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL November 21, 2012 Mulley AG, Trimble C, Elwyn G. BMJ. 2012;345:e6572. View more articles from the same authors. This commentary describes how misidentifying patients' preferences affects their care and recommends tactics to prevent it. Related news article PubMed citation Available at Save Save to your library Print Share Facebook Twitter Linkedin Copy URL Cite Citation Citation Text: Mulley AG, Trimble C, Elwyn G. Stop the silent misdiagnosis: patients' preferences matter. BMJ. 2012;345:e6572. doi:10.1136/bmj.e6572. Copy Citation Format: DOIGoogle ScholarPubMedBibTeXEndNote X3 XMLEndNote 7 XMLEndnote taggedPubMedIdRIS Download Citation Related Resources From the Same Author(s) Understanding unwarranted variation in clinical practice: a focus on network effects, reflective medicine and learning health systems. February 2, 2020 The patient safety story. March 4, 2011 Approaches to reducing the most important patient errors in primary health-care: patient and professional perspectives. June 2, 2010 Patient error: a preliminary taxonomy. April 12, 2011 Patient safety and patient error. January 14, 2011 The quality, safety and content of telephone and face-to-face consultations: a comparative study. August 8, 2010 Supporting the emotional well-being of health care workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. August 5, 2020 Medication errors associated with transition from insulin pens to insulin vials. March 8, 2017 The thinking doctor: clinical decision making in contemporary medicine. August 31, 2016 'I think this medicine actually killed my wife': patient and family perspectives on shared decision-making to optimize medications and safety. July 17, 2019 View More Related Resources Advancing diagnostic equity through clinician engagement, community partnerships, and connected care. February 22, 2023 Embedded bias: how medical records sow discrimination. October 5, 2022 How cisgender clinicians can help prevent harm during encounters with transgender patients. August 24, 2022 Presenting complaint: use of language that disempowers patients. May 11, 2022 A family and hospital's journey and commitment to improving diagnostic safety. March 9, 2022 Addressing medicine's bias against patients who are overweight. March 27, 2019 The iatrogenic potential of the physician's words. January 8, 2018 A framework for encouraging patient engagement in medical decision making. December 4, 2016 The heart of health care: parents' perspectives on patient safety. November 28, 2016 In support of the medical apology: the nonlegal arguments. November 18, 2016 View More See More About The Topic Health Care Providers Medicine Psychological and Social Complications Cognitive Errors ("Mistakes") Provider-Patient Communication
Understanding unwarranted variation in clinical practice: a focus on network effects, reflective medicine and learning health systems. February 2, 2020
Approaches to reducing the most important patient errors in primary health-care: patient and professional perspectives. June 2, 2010
The quality, safety and content of telephone and face-to-face consultations: a comparative study. August 8, 2010
Supporting the emotional well-being of health care workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. August 5, 2020
'I think this medicine actually killed my wife': patient and family perspectives on shared decision-making to optimize medications and safety. July 17, 2019
Advancing diagnostic equity through clinician engagement, community partnerships, and connected care. February 22, 2023
How cisgender clinicians can help prevent harm during encounters with transgender patients. August 24, 2022