Abstract:The increasing use of medical checklists to promote patient safety raises the question of their utility in diagnostic radiology. This study evaluates the efficacy of a checkliststyle reporting template in reducing resident misses on cervical spine CT examinations. A checklist-style reporting template for cervical spine CTs was created at our institution and mandated for resident preliminary reports. Ten months after implementation of the template, we performed a retrospective cohort study comparing rates of em… Show more
“…Lack of information in radiology reports is not restricted to cancer imaging. Similar problems with lack of information have been identified, for example, in lumbar spine imaging [41], multiple sclerosis MRI [42], and cervical spine CT [43].…”
Section: Quality and Communication-why Is There A Communication Gap?supporting
confidence: 52%
“…Structured reporting can lead to an increase in quality of reports, higher reproducibility and standardization, increased productivity of the department, better satisfaction of referring physicians, fewer inquiries on report content, and a huge number of data from the possibility to analyze the report content [17,18,43,78,79]. The latter has further consequences for better exploitation of routine data for the gain of new knowledge in the medical field.…”
Section: Opportunities Of Structured Reportingmentioning
Ineffective communication in healthcare contributes to patient morbidity and mortality. Understanding why failures in communication occur requires an understanding of how healthcare professionals communicate and models explaining the communication process. Radiologists communicate most commonly using the radiology report. Worldwide it is estimated that billions of radiological examinations are performed annually. The quality of each radiology report can contribute to patient care either in a positive manner leading to better outcomes or can be a source of medical error. Recent articles highlight quality gaps in radiology reports related not only to accuracy but also to clarity and completeness. We review and highlight the gaps related to the quality of radiology reports and discuss strategies to improve effective communication.
“…Lack of information in radiology reports is not restricted to cancer imaging. Similar problems with lack of information have been identified, for example, in lumbar spine imaging [41], multiple sclerosis MRI [42], and cervical spine CT [43].…”
Section: Quality and Communication-why Is There A Communication Gap?supporting
confidence: 52%
“…Structured reporting can lead to an increase in quality of reports, higher reproducibility and standardization, increased productivity of the department, better satisfaction of referring physicians, fewer inquiries on report content, and a huge number of data from the possibility to analyze the report content [17,18,43,78,79]. The latter has further consequences for better exploitation of routine data for the gain of new knowledge in the medical field.…”
Section: Opportunities Of Structured Reportingmentioning
Ineffective communication in healthcare contributes to patient morbidity and mortality. Understanding why failures in communication occur requires an understanding of how healthcare professionals communicate and models explaining the communication process. Radiologists communicate most commonly using the radiology report. Worldwide it is estimated that billions of radiological examinations are performed annually. The quality of each radiology report can contribute to patient care either in a positive manner leading to better outcomes or can be a source of medical error. Recent articles highlight quality gaps in radiology reports related not only to accuracy but also to clarity and completeness. We review and highlight the gaps related to the quality of radiology reports and discuss strategies to improve effective communication.
“…In addition to patient care, these reports are commonly components of educational, research, legal, and billing purposes. The use of structured reporting has been shown to improve image interpretation and surgical planning compared with nonstructured reports [20][21][22]. However, multiple studies indicate that radiology report guidelines and templates insufficiently address clear objectives and implementation issues [18,19,23].…”
“…Last, contextual templates that emphasize a systematic approach to interpretation can help mitigate the cognitive bias of "satisfaction of search." 30 This error occurs when a radiologist identifies a finding and overlooks additional findings due to complacency. Contextual reporting will remind the user to look at all described entities regardless of whether 1 finding is already identified.…”
Section: Contextual Templates Educate Trainees By Providing a Systemamentioning
Structured reporting has many advantages over conventional narrative reporting and has been advocated for standard usage by radiologic societies and literature. Traditional structured reports though are often not tailored to the appropriate clinical situation, are generic, and can be overly constraining. Contextual reporting is an alternative method of structured reporting that is specifically related to the disease or examination indication. Herein, we create a library of 50 contextual structured reports for neuroradiologists and emphasize their clinical value over noncontextual structured reporting. These templates are located in the On-line Appendix, and a downloadable PowerScribe 360 file may be accessed at https://drive.google.com/open?id=1AlPUmfAXPzjkMFcHf7vGKF4Q-vIdpflT.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.