Lee Bonmyong, Otero Hansel J, Whitehead Matthew T
Department of Radiology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institute, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Radiology, Children's National Medical Center, 111 Michigan Ave. NW, Washington, DC, 20010, USA.
Pediatr Radiol. 2017 Dec;47(13):1724-1729. doi: 10.1007/s00247-017-3960-4. Epub 2017 Aug 29.
The American College of Radiology (ACR) practice parameters for communication dictate that follow-up recommendations be suggested when appropriate. Radiologists assume that referring physicians read their reports and heed their advice. In reality, recommendations might not be carried out or even acknowledged.
We aimed to determine the proportion of imaging recommendations that are acknowledged and acted upon.
We conducted a retrospective review of all consecutive radiology reports containing "recommend" in the impression at a single academic children's hospital over a 1-month period. We documented point of care (emergency department, inpatient, outpatient), study type, recommendation wording, and communication method (report only or direct verbal). We reviewed medical records to ascertain whether the recommendations were acknowledged or executed. We used chi-square tests to evaluate associations between variables. P<0.05 was considered significant.
We reviewed 526 reports and excluded 73. We included the remaining 453 reports, from 370 unique patients (201 male, 169 female). Inpatients comprised most reports (n=223), followed by emergency department (ED) patients (n=118) and outpatients (n=112). Among these reports, 69% (n=313) of recommendations were executed. Of the 140 recommendations not carried out, 14% were acknowledged in clinical notes. Compliance correlated with point of care (ED>inpatient>outpatient; P=0.001) but not with additional verbal communication (P=0.33), study type (radiograph vs. other; P=0.35) or type of follow-up recommendation (follow-up imaging vs. other; P=0.99).
Nearly one-third of radiology report follow-up recommendations are not executed. Recommendations are most commonly neglected for outpatient imaging reports. The radiology community should take steps to improve recommendation adherence.
美国放射学会(ACR)的沟通实践参数规定,应在适当的时候给出随访建议。放射科医生假定转诊医生会阅读他们的报告并听从他们的建议。但实际上,这些建议可能未被执行甚至未被知晓。
我们旨在确定被认可并得到执行的影像检查建议的比例。
我们对一家学术性儿童医院在1个月期间所有在印象中包含“建议”的连续放射学报告进行了回顾性研究。我们记录了护理点(急诊科、住院部、门诊部)、检查类型、建议措辞以及沟通方式(仅报告或直接口头沟通)。我们查阅病历以确定建议是否被认可或执行。我们使用卡方检验来评估变量之间的关联。P<0.05被认为具有统计学意义。
我们审查了526份报告,排除了73份。我们纳入了其余453份报告,来自370名不同的患者(201名男性,169名女性)。住院患者的报告占大多数(n = 223),其次是急诊科患者(n = 118)和门诊患者(n = 112)。在这些报告中,69%(n = 313)的建议得到了执行。在140条未被执行的建议中,14%在临床记录中被认可。依从性与护理点相关(急诊科>住院部>门诊部;P = 0.001),但与额外的口头沟通无关(P = 0.33)、检查类型无关(X光片与其他;P = 0.35)或随访建议类型无关(随访影像检查与其他;P = 0.99)。
近三分之一的放射学报告随访建议未被执行。门诊影像检查报告的建议最常被忽视。放射学界应采取措施提高建议的依从性。