Terreblanche Owen D, Andronikou Savvas, Hlabangana Linda T, Brown Taryn, Boshoff Pieter E
Department of Radiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.
Acta Radiol. 2012 Feb 1;53(1):61-8. doi: 10.1258/ar.2011.110103.
There is a heavy reliance on registrars for after-hours CT reporting with a resultant unavoidable error rate.
To determine the after-hours CT reporting error rate by radiology registrars and influencing factors on this error rate.
A 2-month prospective study was undertaken at two tertiary, level 1 trauma centers in Johannesburg, South Africa. Provisional CT reports issued by the registrar on call were reviewed by a qualified radiologist the following morning and information relating to the number, time and type of reporting errors made as well as the body region scanned, indication for the scan, year of training of the registrar, and workload during the call were recorded and analyzed.
A total of 1477 CT scans were performed with an overall error rate of 17.1% and a major error rate of 7.7%. The error rate for 2nd, 3rd, and 4th year registrars was 19.4%, 15.1%, and 14.5%, respectively. A significant difference was found between the error rate in reporting trauma scans (15.8%) compared to non-trauma scans (19.2%) although the difference between emergency scans (16.9%) and elective scans (22.6%) was found to be not significant, a finding likely due to the low number of elective scans performed. Abdominopelvic scans elicited the highest number of errors (33.9%) compared to the other body regions such as head (16.5%) and cervical, thoracic, or lumbar spine (11.7%). Increasing workload resulted in a significant increase in error rate when analyzed with a generalized linear model. There was also a significant difference noted in the time of scan groups which we attributed to a workload effect. Missed findings were the most frequent errors seen (57.3%).
We found an increasing error rate associated with increasing workload and marked increase in errors with the reporting of abdominopelvic scans. There was a decrease in the error rate when looking an increasing year of training although this there was only found to be significant difference between the 2nd and 3rd year registrars.
非工作时间的CT报告严重依赖住院医师,因此不可避免地存在错误率。
确定放射科住院医师非工作时间的CT报告错误率以及影响该错误率的因素。
在南非约翰内斯堡的两家三级1级创伤中心进行了为期2个月的前瞻性研究。次日上午,由一名合格的放射科医生对值班住院医师出具的临时CT报告进行审核,并记录和分析与报告错误的数量、时间和类型相关的信息,以及扫描的身体部位、扫描指征、住院医师的培训年份和值班期间的工作量。
共进行了1477次CT扫描,总错误率为17.1%,主要错误率为7.7%。第二年、第三年和第四年住院医师的错误率分别为19.4%、15.1%和14.5%。尽管急诊扫描(16.9%)和择期扫描(22.6%)之间的差异不显著(这一发现可能是由于择期扫描的数量较少),但与非创伤性扫描(19.2%)相比,创伤性扫描的报告错误率(15.8%)存在显著差异。与其他身体部位如头部(16.5%)和颈椎、胸椎或腰椎(11.7%)相比,腹部盆腔扫描的错误数量最多(33.9%)。使用广义线性模型分析时,工作量增加导致错误率显著增加。扫描时间组之间也存在显著差异,我们将其归因于工作量效应。漏诊是最常见的错误(57.3%)。
我们发现错误率随着工作量的增加而增加,腹部盆腔扫描报告的错误显著增加。随着培训年份的增加,错误率有所下降,尽管仅在第二年和第三年住院医师之间发现了显著差异。