Baker I A
Br Med J (Clin Res Ed). 1982 Aug 14;285(6340):487-9. doi: 10.1136/bmj.285.6340.487.
Senior neuroradiologists or radiologists of 42 hospitals with computed tomography available for NHS patients in England and Wales were contacted by postal questionnaire about the use of this facility in the management of patients with acute head injuries. Replies were obtained from 39 hospitals. Requests for computed tomography from general surgeons or physicians and staff of accident and emergency departments received positive responses for scanning with only half to three-quarters the frequency of responses to requests from neurosurgeons. Continuous computed tomography facilities were available generally to neurosurgeons. The combined effect of partial responses to requests and the availability of the computed tomography service meant that only 44% of hospitals gave a continuous service for general surgeons or physicians. The percentage of hospitals giving a continuous service to accident and emergency departments was 54%. It appeared that computed tomography scanning was being used most often as a diagnostic/management instrument after clinical selection among patients with head injuries rather than as an instrument to be used in primary assessment.
我们通过邮政问卷联系了英格兰和威尔士42家为国民医疗服务体系(NHS)患者提供计算机断层扫描(CT)的医院的资深神经放射科医生或放射科医生,询问该设备在急性颅脑损伤患者管理中的使用情况。收到了39家医院的回复。普通外科医生、内科医生以及急诊科工作人员提出的CT检查请求,得到的扫描肯定答复频率仅为神经外科医生请求的一半至四分之三。神经外科医生通常可以使用连续CT设备。对请求的部分回应以及CT服务的可用性综合起来,意味着只有44%的医院为普通外科医生或内科医生提供连续服务。为急诊科提供连续服务的医院比例为54%。似乎CT扫描在颅脑损伤患者经过临床筛选后,最常被用作诊断/管理工具,而非用于初步评估的工具。