Atlas / Shrink Thinking / Clinical Reasoning
SC-0215Evidence: under reviewShrink Thinkingapplied

Differential Diagnosis

Think broadly before narrowing.

Shrink Definition

Differential diagnosis is the systematic process of identifying and comparing multiple plausible explanations for a patient's presentation before determining the most likely diagnosis. The purpose of a differential diagnosis isn't simply to find a diagnosis. It's to avoid overlooking important alternatives. As new information becomes available, the differential diagnosis should be refined.

Plain language

Consider several reasonable explanations before deciding.

Shrink Insight

The best clinicians usually ask, "What else could this be?"

Why it matters

Differential diagnosis improves: patient safety diagnostic accuracy clinical reasoning treatment selection risk management The same principle improves problem-solving outside medicine by discouraging premature conclusions.

Common misunderstanding

Having a differential diagnosis doesn't indicate uncertainty or lack of knowledge. It reflects disciplined reasoning.

Shrink Perspective

Strong thinkers keep multiple possibilities alive until the evidence clearly favors one.

Shrink Reflection

How often do you stop searching for explanations after finding the first reasonable answer?

Shrink Journal

Choose a recent problem. Generate at least three plausible explanations before deciding.

Shrink Step

Practice asking, "What important possibility have I not yet considered?"

Shrink Minute

Explore before concluding.

Shrink Takeaway

Broad thinking protects against narrow mistakes.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Differential diagnosis is one of the foundational methods of clinical reasoning across medicine, psychiatry, neurology, emergency medicine, and primary care. Structured consideration of alternative explanations is associated with improved diagnostic accuracy and patient safety. Medical Boundary Differential diagnosis is a professional clinical process and shouldn't be used by the public as a substitute for medical evaluation.

Sources

DSM-5-TR (American Psychiatric Association); clinical reasoning literature; American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: landmark attributed