Beirne Geraldene Carruthers, Westerway Susan Campbell, Ng Curtise Kin Cheung
Department of Medical Radiation Sciences Curtin University Perth Western Australia Australia.
School of Medical and Applied Sciences Central Queensland University Sydney New South Wales Australia.
Australas J Ultrasound Med. 2016 May 20;19(2):47-55. doi: 10.1002/ajum.12008. eCollection 2016 May.
To identify gaps in Australian sonographer's knowledge and application of as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) principles during first trimester imaging; Identify relationships between demographic variables and knowledge or application of the Output Display Standard (ODS) value thermal index (TI) and compare Australian sonographers to their international peers.
Australian Sonographer Accreditation Registered ASAR)-registered sonographers completed a voluntary questionnaire over September 2015 after institutional ethics approval (RDSE-48-15). Seventeen questions detailed their demographics (5); knowledge of ultrasound bioeffects terminology and ALARA principles (9); behaviour surrounding ALARA and first trimester imaging (2) and continuing bioeffects education (1). Exclusion criteria was non-ASAR status. Descriptive (mode frequency) and inferential statistics (Fisher exact test) were used. Significance level was 95%.
Ninety-five valid surveys were collected. Ninety-nine per cent knew the meaning of ALARA, 93.55% correctly defined 'TI' and 85.39% knew where to find the TI value via the ODS. Half never monitor the ODS. No correlation (P = 0.094) was found between experience and ODS monitoring. No statistical difference (P = 0.189) existed between obstetric and non-obstetric sonographers who knew the meaning of TIB (87.18% vs. 76.92%) or those who correctly identified it as the setting for 11-14-week examinations (30.77% vs. 30.77%). When using Doppler during obstetric examinations, no difference existed (P = 0.293), between obstetric and non-obstetric sonographers' knowledge of ASUM/WFUMB guidelines for maximum TI (47.37% vs. 46.15%).
Despite poor ODS usage, Australian sonographers outperform their international peers for ALARA literacy, and show better application of ALARA principles in the first trimester. No relationships were found between demographic variables and knowledge or conscious monitoring of ODS.
确定澳大利亚超声检查医师在孕早期成像过程中对合理可行尽量低(ALARA)原则的知识掌握和应用方面的差距;确定人口统计学变量与输出显示标准(ODS)值热指数(TI)的知识或应用之间的关系,并将澳大利亚超声检查医师与其国际同行进行比较。
在获得机构伦理批准(RDSE - 48 - 15)后,澳大利亚超声检查医师认证注册(ASAR)的超声检查医师于2015年9月完成了一份自愿调查问卷。17个问题详细询问了他们的人口统计学信息(5个);超声生物效应术语和ALARA原则的知识(9个);围绕ALARA和孕早期成像的行为(2个)以及持续的生物效应教育(1个)。排除标准为非ASAR身份。使用了描述性统计(众数频率)和推断性统计(Fisher精确检验)。显著性水平为95%。
共收集到95份有效调查问卷。99%的人知道ALARA的含义,93.55%的人正确定义了“TI”,85.39%的人知道如何通过ODS找到TI值。一半的人从不监测ODS。经验与ODS监测之间未发现相关性(P = 0.094)。知道TIB含义的产科和非产科超声检查医师之间(87.18%对76.92%)或正确将其识别为11 - 14周检查设置的医师之间(30.77%对30.77%)不存在统计学差异(P = 0.189)。在产科检查中使用多普勒时,产科和非产科超声检查医师对ASUM/WFUMB最大TI指南的了解之间不存在差异(P = 0.293)(47.37%对46.15%)。
尽管ODS使用情况不佳,但澳大利亚超声检查医师在ALARA知识水平方面优于其国际同行,并且在孕早期对ALARA原则的应用表现更好。在人口统计学变量与ODS的知识或有意识监测之间未发现相关性。