Hillman B J, Joseph C A, Mabry M R, Sunshine J H, Kennedy S D, Noether M
Department of Radiology, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson.
N Engl J Med. 1990 Dec 6;323(23):1604-8. doi: 10.1056/NEJM199012063232306.
To assess possible differences in physicians' practices with respect to diagnostic imaging, we compared the frequency and costs of imaging examinations as performed by primary physicians who used imaging equipment in their offices (self-referring) and as ordered by physicians who always referred patients to radiologists (radiologist-referring).
Using a large, private insurance-claims data base, we analyzed 65,517 episodes of outpatient care by 6419 physicians for acute upper respiratory symptoms, pregnancy, low back pain, or (in men) difficulty urinating. The respective imaging procedures studied were chest radiography, obstetrical ultrasonography, radiography of the lumbar spine, and excretory urography, cystography, or ultrasonography.
For all four clinical presentations, the self-referring physicians obtained imaging examinations 4.0 to 4.5 times more often than the radiologist-referring physicians (P less than 0.0001 for all four). For chest radiography, obstetrical ultrasonography, and lumbar spine radiography, the self-referring physicians charged significantly more than the radiologists for imaging examinations of similar complexity (P less than 0.0001 for all three). The combination of more frequent imaging and higher charges resulted in mean imaging charges per episode of care that were 4.4 to 7.5 times higher for the self-referring physicians (P less than 0.0001). These results were confirmed in a separate analysis that controlled for the specialty of the physician.
Physicians who do not refer their patients to radiologists for medical imaging use imaging examinations more frequently than do physicians who refer their patients to radiologists, and the charges are usually higher when the imaging is done by the self-referring physician. From our results it is not possible to determine which group of physicians uses imaging more appropriately.
为评估医生在诊断性影像学检查方面的行为差异,我们比较了在办公室使用影像设备的初级医生(自我转诊)和总是将患者转诊给放射科医生的医生(放射科医生转诊)所进行的影像学检查的频率和费用。
利用一个大型的私人保险理赔数据库,我们分析了6419名医生针对急性上呼吸道症状、妊娠、腰痛或(男性)排尿困难进行的65517例门诊治疗。所研究的相应影像学检查包括胸部X线摄影、产科超声检查、腰椎X线摄影以及排泄性尿路造影、膀胱造影或超声检查。
对于所有四种临床表现,自我转诊医生进行影像学检查的频率比放射科医生转诊医生高4.0至4.5倍(所有四种情况P均小于0.0001)。对于胸部X线摄影、产科超声检查和腰椎X线摄影,自我转诊医生对类似复杂程度的影像学检查收取的费用显著高于放射科医生(所有三种情况P均小于0.0001)。更频繁的影像学检查和更高的收费相结合,导致自我转诊医生每次护理的平均影像学收费比放射科医生转诊医生高4.4至7.5倍(P小于0.0001)。这些结果在一项控制了医生专业的单独分析中得到了证实。
不将患者转诊给放射科医生进行医学影像检查的医生比将患者转诊给放射科医生的医生更频繁地使用影像学检查,并且当由自我转诊医生进行影像学检查时,费用通常更高。从我们的结果中无法确定哪一组医生更恰当地使用了影像学检查。