(Note that the main thing you’ll find when you search for replications is Lauren Slater’s book. Don’t trust it; she won’t share any evidence and has a history of lying).
First link: Patients were psychiatric nurses, faking specific illnesses during their whole stay. (Rosenhan had various people faking atypical symptoms until admission.) Doctors believing them aren’t to blame.
Among the findings of the project were that patients frequently found it difficult to get information on their treatment
Agrees with my experience. A computer for patients and access to Crazy Meds help, but I don’t know an easy fix for less geeky patients.
Second link: That’s a pretty good test. However, the doctors were shown patients who had been treated and were doing well. It’s harder to diagnose short-sightedness if your patient is wearing contact lenses.
So neither of these tests are nearly as stringent as Rosenhan’s.
Things are not entirely different.
Here’s another one
(Note that the main thing you’ll find when you search for replications is Lauren Slater’s book. Don’t trust it; she won’t share any evidence and has a history of lying).
First link: Patients were psychiatric nurses, faking specific illnesses during their whole stay. (Rosenhan had various people faking atypical symptoms until admission.) Doctors believing them aren’t to blame.
Agrees with my experience. A computer for patients and access to Crazy Meds help, but I don’t know an easy fix for less geeky patients.
Second link: That’s a pretty good test. However, the doctors were shown patients who had been treated and were doing well. It’s harder to diagnose short-sightedness if your patient is wearing contact lenses.
So neither of these tests are nearly as stringent as Rosenhan’s.