Chan Keith T, Carroll Tamara, Linnau Ken F, Lehnert Bruce
Department of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St, RR215, Mailbox 357115, Seattle, WA 98195-7115.
Department of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St, RR215, Mailbox 357115, Seattle, WA 98195-7115.
Acad Radiol. 2015 Nov;22(11):1449-56. doi: 10.1016/j.acra.2015.06.019. Epub 2015 Aug 24.
Imaging report turnaround time (RTAT) is an important measure of radiology performance and has become the leading priority in customer satisfaction surveys conducted among nonradiologists, who may not be familiar with the imaging workflow. Our aim was to assess physicians' expected RTAT for commonly ordered studies and determine if satisfaction correlates with met expectations.
Retrospective review of inpatient imaging was conducted at a single academic institution, and RTAT for 18,414 studies was calculated. Examinations were grouped by study type, priority, and time of day. A cross-sectional survey instrument was completed by 48 internal medicine and surgery resident physicians with questions regarding RTAT and their level of satisfaction with various examinations.
Actual RTAT ranged from 1.6 to 26.0 hours, with chest radiographs and computed tomographies generally faster than magnetic resonance images and ultrasounds. Urgent (STAT) examinations and those ordered during business hours have shorter RTAT. The time for image interpretation largely contributed to the RTAT because of the lack of night-time radiology coverage. Referring physician expectations were consistently shorter than actual RTAT, ranging from 30 minutes to 24 hours. Overall satisfaction scores were inversely correlated with RTAT, with a strong correlation to the time from study order to imaging (r(2) = 0.63) and a weak correlation to the image interpretation time (r(2) = 0.17). Satisfaction scores did not correlate with whether the actual RTAT met expectations (r(2) = 0.06).
Referring physician satisfaction is likely multifactorial. Although RTAT has been reported as a priority, shortening turnaround time alone may not directly improve clinician satisfaction.
影像报告周转时间(RTAT)是衡量放射科表现的一项重要指标,在针对可能不熟悉影像工作流程的非放射科医生进行的客户满意度调查中,它已成为首要关注点。我们的目的是评估医生对常用检查项目的预期RTAT,并确定满意度是否与预期相符。
在一家学术机构对住院患者影像检查进行回顾性分析,计算18414项检查的RTAT。检查按检查类型、优先级和时间分组。48名内科和外科住院医师完成了一份横断面调查问卷,问题涉及RTAT以及他们对各种检查的满意度。
实际RTAT为1.6至26.0小时,胸部X光片和计算机断层扫描通常比磁共振成像和超声检查更快。紧急(STAT)检查以及在工作时间内开出的检查RTAT较短。由于缺乏夜间放射科值班,影像解读时间在很大程度上影响了RTAT。转诊医生的预期时间始终短于实际RTAT,范围从30分钟到24小时。总体满意度得分与RTAT呈负相关,与从检查开单到成像的时间相关性很强(r² = 0.63),与影像解读时间相关性较弱(r² = 0.17)。满意度得分与实际RTAT是否符合预期无关(r² = 0.06)。
转诊医生的满意度可能受多种因素影响。尽管RTAT已被视为首要任务,但仅缩短周转时间可能无法直接提高临床医生的满意度。