McGurk S, Brauer K, Macfarlane T V, Duncan K A
Department of Radiology, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, The University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, UK.
Br J Radiol. 2008 Oct;81(970):767-70. doi: 10.1259/bjr/20698753. Epub 2008 Jul 15.
This study sought to confirm whether reports generated in a department of radiology contain more errors if generated using voice recognition (VR) software than if traditional dictation-transcription (DT) is used. All radiology reports generated over a 1-week period in a British teaching hospital were assessed. The presence of errors and their impact on the report were assessed. Data collected included the type of report, site of dictation, the experience of the operator, and whether English was the first language of the operator. 1887 reports were reviewed. 1160 (61.5%) were dictated using VR and 727 reports (38.5%) were generated by DT. 71 errors (3.8% of all reports) were identified. 56 errors were made using VR (4.8% of VR reports), whereas 15 errors were identified in DT reports (2.1% of transcribed reports). The difference in report errors between these two dictation methods was statistically significant (p = 0.002). Of the 71 reports containing errors, 37 (52.1%) had errors that affecting understanding. Other factors were also identified that significantly increased the likelihood of errors in a VR-generated report, such as working in a busy inpatient environment (p<0.001) and having a language other than English as a first language (p = 0.034). Operator grade was not significantly associated with increased errors. In conclusion, using VR significantly increases the number of reports containing errors. Errors using VR are significantly more likely to occur in noisy areas with a high workload and are more likely to be made by radiologists for whom English is not their first language.
本研究旨在确认放射科使用语音识别(VR)软件生成的报告是否比使用传统听写转录(DT)生成的报告包含更多错误。对一家英国教学医院在1周内生成的所有放射学报告进行了评估。评估了错误的存在及其对报告的影响。收集的数据包括报告类型、听写地点、操作员的经验以及英语是否为操作员的第一语言。共审查了1887份报告。其中1160份(61.5%)是使用VR听写的,727份报告(38.5%)是通过DT生成的。共识别出71处错误(占所有报告的3.8%)。使用VR产生了56处错误(占VR报告的4.8%),而在DT报告中识别出15处错误(占转录报告的2.1%)。这两种听写方法在报告错误方面的差异具有统计学意义(p = 0.002)。在71份包含错误的报告中,37份(52.1%)的错误影响了理解。还确定了其他因素会显著增加VR生成报告中出现错误的可能性,例如在繁忙的住院环境中工作(p<0.001)以及第一语言不是英语(p = 0.034)。操作员级别与错误增加没有显著关联。总之,使用VR会显著增加包含错误的报告数量。使用VR时,错误更有可能发生在工作量大且嘈杂的区域,并且更有可能由英语不是第一语言的放射科医生犯下。