That's also roughly my understanding, perhaps dramatically so in the case of commercial/industrial installations if what I've been told here is true.
As I wrote in response to Risteard, the problem with such statements is that 'more' and 'less' are reciprocally related - i.e. if A is more than B, then B is less than A. If one advocates "a more thorough inspection at known problem spots" that inevitably implies "a less thorough inspection at spots not known to be problems" - and that worries me, since problems can obviously appear 'out of the blue' in something that was previously fine.
I would say that, regardless of previous inspection results and regardless of what are perceived as "known problem spots", inspection of everything which is inspected should be thorough enough to identify any defects which are present at the time of the inspection - in which case your suggestion of a "more thorough" inspection in some cases would seem unnecessary..
As I keep saying, I personally believe that (in any 'regular inspection' scenario) comparison of current inspection results with historical ones, if available, is not just 'of interest', but is actually important. However, such a comparison is totally unimportant (since it shouldn't be taken into consideration) in terms of writing an EICR. One cannot (should not!) code something as 'a defect', because it is 'heading in that direction' but has not yet gone beyond 'acceptable limits'