Department of Radiology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin. Electronic address: https://twitter.com/SueYYiii.
Vice Chair of Equity, Department of Radiology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin; Assistant Editor of JACR and Vice Chair, ACR Patient and Family Centered Care Outreach Committee. Electronic address: https://twitter.com/AnandKNarayan.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2023 Dec;20(12):1193-1206. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2023.04.021. Epub 2023 Jul 7.
To determine imaging utilization rates in outpatient primary care visits and factors influencing likelihood of imaging use.
We used 2013 to 2018 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey cross-sectional data. All visits to primary care clinics during the study period were included in the sample. Descriptive statistics on visit characteristics including imaging utilization were calculated. Logistic regression analyses evaluated the influence of a variety of patient-, provider-, and practice-level variables on the odds of obtaining diagnostic imaging, further subdivided by modality (radiographs, CT, MRI, and ultrasound). The data's survey weighting was accounted for to produce valid national-level estimates of imaging use for US office-based primary care visits.
Using survey weights, approximately 2.8 billion patient visits were included. Diagnostic imaging was ordered at 12.5% of visits with radiographs the most common (4.3%) and MRI the least common (0.8%). Imaging utilization was similar or greater among minority patients compared with White, non-Hispanic patients. Physician assistants used imaging at higher rates than physicians, in particular CT at 6.5% of visits compared with 0.7% for doctors of medicine and doctors of osteopathic medicine (odds ratio 5.67, 95% confidence interval 4.07-7.88).
Disparities in rates of imaging utilization for minorities seen in other health care settings were not present in this sample of primary care visits, supporting that access to primary care is a path to promote health equity. Higher rates of imaging utilization among advanced-level practitioners highlight an opportunity to evaluate imaging appropriateness and promote equitable, high-value imaging among all practitioners.
确定在门诊初级保健就诊中影像利用率以及影响影像使用可能性的因素。
我们使用了 2013 年至 2018 年全国门诊医疗保健调查的横断面数据。研究期间所有到初级保健诊所就诊的患者均纳入样本。计算了包括影像利用率在内的就诊特征的描述性统计数据。使用逻辑回归分析评估了各种患者、提供者和实践水平变量对获得诊断影像的可能性的影响,进一步按模态(X 光片、CT、MRI 和超声)细分。考虑到数据的调查权重,以产生美国基于办公室的初级保健就诊中影像使用的有效全国水平估计。
使用调查权重,大约有 28 亿人次就诊被纳入。12.5%的就诊中开具了诊断影像,其中 X 光片最常见(4.3%),MRI 最不常见(0.8%)。与白人非西班牙裔患者相比,少数民族患者的影像利用率相似或更高。与医生相比,医生助理使用影像的频率更高,特别是 CT 在 6.5%的就诊中使用,而医生和骨科医生仅在 0.7%的就诊中使用(比值比 5.67,95%置信区间 4.07-7.88)。
在本初级保健就诊样本中,少数民族在其他医疗保健环境中存在的影像利用率差异并不存在,这表明获得初级保健是促进健康公平的途径。高级从业者中更高的影像利用率突出了评估影像适宜性并促进所有从业者中公平、高价值影像的机会。