RT Book, Section A1 Barnato, Amber E. A2 Schwartz, Rachel A2 Hall, Judith A. A2 Osterberg, Lars G. SR Print(0) ID 1182527170 T1 Emotion and Decision Making in the Clinical Encounter T2 Emotion in the Clinical Encounter YR 2021 FD 2021 PB McGraw Hill PP New York, NY SN 9781260464320 LK hemonc.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1182527170 RD 2024/04/16 AB We’ve been trained to believe that clinical decision making is rational and analytic; that emotions get in the way of good decision making. While considerable evidence suggests that emotions do influence decision making and that very strong negative emotional states impair information processing and reasoning, increasing evidence suggests that intuitive deliberation, which relies on affective cues, may produce better outcomes than analytical deliberation alone.