Spiritoso Rosalba, Padley Simon, Singh Suveer
Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK.
Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
J Intensive Care Soc. 2015 Nov;16(4):339-344. doi: 10.1177/1751143715580141. Epub 2015 May 18.
This survey investigated current practice in intensive care unit radiology reporting using a survey tool. We ascertained physician attitudes regarding best practice.
A national survey was sent by email to a sample of intensive care units throughout UK between March and October 2014. The questionnaire determined current practice in reporting chest X-ray in intensive care units. It also identified differences between 'routine' and emergency and out-of-hours service. Further, it investigated how reports were documented and physician preferences for perceived best practice.
Of 146 intensive care units contacted, 55% completed the survey. Of the sample, radiologists were solely responsible for chest X-ray reporting in 43.7%, intensive care unit clinicians in 33.7% and joint reporting in 25% of intensive care units. The reporting clinician on intensive care unit was a consultant in 67% of the centres. Written reports by radiologists were provided in 71.7% of cases. This was only 54.5% when intensive care unit clinicians reported chest X-rays. For all routine and emergency films, written reports by radiologists occurred in 63.1% of responders. Out-of-hours, 54.9% of clinicians described different reporting practice to normal hours. Regarding perceived best practice, 64.8% of clinicians preferred joint daily reporting, whilst 27% preferred a radiologist's formal report. For emergencies, 55.2% of the survey recipients preferred a joint report.
Based on this cohort of UK intensive care units, at present, there appears to be a lack of a standardised system for image reporting. There are discrepancies in who reports chest X-rays, written documentation and the timing of reports, more so out-of-hours. Clinicians suggest that joint reporting should be the standard.
本调查使用一种调查工具研究了重症监护病房放射学报告的当前实践情况。我们确定了医生对于最佳实践的态度。
2014年3月至10月期间,通过电子邮件向英国各地的一组重症监护病房样本发送了一份全国性调查问卷。该问卷确定了重症监护病房胸部X光报告的当前实践情况。它还识别了“常规”与急诊及非工作时间服务之间的差异。此外,它调查了报告是如何记录的以及医生对公认最佳实践的偏好。
在联系的146个重症监护病房中,55%完成了调查。在样本中,放射科医生单独负责43.7%的重症监护病房的胸部X光报告,重症监护病房临床医生负责33.7%,25%的重症监护病房采用联合报告。重症监护病房的报告临床医生在67%的中心是顾问医生。71.7%的病例提供了放射科医生的书面报告。当重症监护病房临床医生报告胸部X光时,这一比例仅为54.5%。对于所有常规和急诊胶片,63.1%的受访者收到了放射科医生的书面报告。在非工作时间,54.9%的临床医生表示报告实践与正常工作时间不同。关于公认的最佳实践,64.8%的临床医生更喜欢每日联合报告,而27%更喜欢放射科医生的正式报告。对于急诊情况,55.2%的调查对象更喜欢联合报告。
基于这组英国重症监护病房的情况,目前似乎缺乏一个标准化的影像报告系统。在谁报告胸部X光、书面记录以及报告时间方面存在差异,非工作时间的差异更大。临床医生建议联合报告应成为标准。