Department of Radiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2021 Mar;18(3 Pt B):467-474. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2021.01.002.
The Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014 requires clinicians to consult Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) when ordering advanced imaging procedures. Free-text order indications are available when there is no applicable structured indication but are unscored by the AUC. We determined the proportion of free-text indications among all advanced imaging orders and the proportion of free-text indications that could be mapped to a single structured indication.
All outpatient advanced diagnostic imaging orders placed in a large multisite health system were recorded after initial AUC deployment (November 20, 2017, to December 19, 2017). Clinicians were prompted upon order entry to select a structured indication or enter a free-text indication. We manually reviewed the two imaging examinations with the highest rate of free-text indications: enhanced CT abdomen/pelvis and unenhanced CT head. Regression analysis examined differences in patient-, imaging-, context-, and provider-level characteristics between scored and unscored examinations.
Among all 39,533 orders for advanced imaging procedures, 59% (23,267 of 39,533) were unscored by the system. The regression model c-statistic (0.50-0.55) demonstrated poor model fit to evaluate for differences between scored and unscored examinations. Free-text indications were found in 71% (16,440 of 23,267) of unscored examinations and 42% (16,440 of 39,533) of all examinations. Manual review of all 1,693 CT abdomen/pelvis and 1,527 CT head examinations with free-text indications revealed that 3,132 free-text indications (97%) could be mapped to a single existing structured indication.
Of all initially placed outpatient advanced imaging procedure orders, 42% included free-text indications and 97% of manually reviewed free-text indications could be mapped to a single structured indication.
2014 年《保护医疗保险法》要求临床医生在开高级影像检查单时参考适用的使用标准(AUC)。当没有适用的结构化指征时,可以提供自由文本医嘱,但 AUC 不会对其评分。我们确定了所有高级影像检查单中自由文本医嘱的比例,以及可以映射到单一结构化指征的自由文本医嘱的比例。
在 AUC 初步部署后(2017 年 11 月 20 日至 12 月 19 日),记录了一个大型多地点医疗系统中所有的门诊高级诊断影像检查单。在医嘱录入时,临床医生会被提示选择结构化指征或输入自由文本医嘱。我们手动审查了两个自由文本医嘱比例最高的影像检查:增强 CT 腹部/骨盆和非增强 CT 头部。回归分析检查了评分和非评分检查之间在患者、影像、背景和提供者水平特征方面的差异。
在所有 39533 项高级影像检查单中,59%(23267 项)未被系统评分。回归模型的 C 统计量(0.50-0.55)显示,该模型对评估评分和非评分检查之间的差异拟合不佳。在 71%(16440 项)的非评分检查和 42%(39533 项)的所有检查中发现了自由文本医嘱。对所有 1693 项 CT 腹部/骨盆和 1527 项 CT 头部的自由文本医嘱进行了手动审查,结果显示 3132 项自由文本医嘱(97%)可以映射到单一的现有结构化指征。
在所有最初放置的门诊高级影像检查单中,42%包括自由文本医嘱,手动审查的自由文本医嘱中 97%可以映射到单一结构化指征。