Broder Joshua Seth, Bhat Rahul, Boyd Joshua P, Ogloblin Ivan A, Limkakeng Alexander, Hocker Michael Brian, Drake Weiying Gao, Miller Taylor, Harringa John Brian, Repplinger Michael D
Division of Emergency Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Georgetown University Hospital and Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Emerg Radiol. 2016 Jun;23(3):221-7. doi: 10.1007/s10140-016-1382-5. Epub 2016 Feb 12.
Emergency department (ED) computed tomography (CT) use has increased substantially in recent years, resulting in increased radiation exposure for patients. Few studies have assessed which parties contribute to CT ordering in the ED. The objective of this study was to determine the proportion of CT scans ordered due to explicit requests by various stakeholders in ED patient care. This is a prospective, observational study performed at three university hospital EDs. CT scans ordered during research assistant hours were eligible for inclusion. Attending emergency physicians (EPs) completed standardized data forms to indicate all parties who had explicitly requested that a specific CT be performed. Forms were completed before the CT results were known in order to minimize bias. Data were obtained from 77 EPs regarding 944 CTs. The parties most frequently requesting CTs were attending EPs (82.0 %, 95 % CI 79.4-84.3), resident physicians (28.6 %, 95 % CI 25.8-31.6), consulting physicians (24.4 %, 95 % CI 21.7-27.2), and admitting physicians (3.9 %, 95 % CI 2.9-5.4). In the 168 instances in which the attending EP did not explicitly request the CT, requests most commonly came from consulting physicians (51.2 %, 95 % CI 43.7-58.6), resident physicians in the ED (39.9 %, 95 % CI 32.8-47.4), and admitting physicians (8.9 %, 95 % CI 5.5-14.2). EPs were the sole party requesting CT in 46.2 % of cases while multiple parties were involved in 39.0 %. Patients, families, and radiologists were uncommon sources of such requests. Emergency physicians requested the majority of CTs, though nearly 20 % were actually not desired by them. Admitting, consulting, and resident physicians in the ED were important contributors to CT utilization.
近年来,急诊科(ED)计算机断层扫描(CT)的使用大幅增加,导致患者辐射暴露增加。很少有研究评估在急诊科中哪些方面导致了CT检查的开具。本研究的目的是确定在急诊患者护理中,因各利益相关方明确要求而开具的CT扫描的比例。这是一项在三家大学医院急诊科进行的前瞻性观察性研究。在研究助理工作时间内开具的CT扫描符合纳入标准。主治急诊医师(EPs)填写标准化数据表格,以表明所有明确要求进行特定CT检查的各方。表格在CT结果知晓之前填写,以尽量减少偏差。获得了77位急诊医师关于944次CT检查的数据。最常要求进行CT检查的各方是主治急诊医师(82.0%,95%置信区间79.4 - 84.3)、住院医师(28.6%,95%置信区间25.8 - 31.6)、会诊医师(24.4%,95%置信区间21.7 - 27.2)和收治医师(3.9%,95%置信区间2.9 - 5.4)。在主治急诊医师未明确要求进行CT检查的168例情况中,请求最常来自会诊医师(51.2%,95%置信区间43.7 - 58.6)、急诊科住院医师(39.9%,95%置信区间32.8 - 47.4)和收治医师(8.9%,95%置信区间5.5 - 14.2)。在46.2%的病例中,急诊医师是要求进行CT检查的唯一一方,而39.0%涉及多方。患者、家属和放射科医生是此类请求的罕见来源。急诊医师要求进行了大多数CT检查,尽管其中近20%实际上并非他们所需要的。急诊科的收治医师、会诊医师和住院医师是CT使用的重要促成因素。