Unraveling the Implications of Digit Bias in Digital Health - A Literature Review

Takahiro Suzuki(St. Luke's International Hospital), Hajime Nagasu(Kawasaki Medical School), Takeshi Ebara(University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan), Nobuyuki Kagiyama(Juntendo University), Takuya Kishi(Japanese Society of Hypertension), Yuichiro Yano(Shiga University of Medical Science), Kazuomi Kario(Jichi Medical University), Akira Nishiyama(Kagawa University), Hisatomi Arima(Fukuoka University), Fujimi Kawai(St. Luke's International University), Shigeru Shibata(Teikyo University), Koichi Node(Saga University), Atsushi Mizuno(St. Luke's International Hospital)
Internal Medicine
December 4, 2024
Cited by 1Open Access
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Abstract

Digital health, which encompasses digital medicine and therapy, integrates advanced technologies across healthcare. Central to this transformation is 'digitization,' which converts continuous analog data into a discrete digital form. However, this process is challenging. First, digitization inherently has the potential to introduce information loss, thereby diminishing the richness and complexity of data. Second, "digit bias," a cognitive distortion, emerges in the interpretation phase, where individuals' perceptions of and reactions to digital data are intrinsically skewed. There exist two major cognitive biases during digitization process: "digit preferences," where healthcare providers prioritize specific numbers, and "left digit bias" where continuous variables are disproportionately estimated by focusing on the leftmost digit. Although information loss and cognitive biases can cause significant distortions in healthcare, the effects of this "digitization" process have not been adequately quantified, and the accumulation of further evidence in this field is anticipated.


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