1. Abdominal and pelvic CT scan interpretation of emergency medicine physicians compared with radiologists’ report and its impact on patients’ outcome
- Author
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Atoosa Akhgar, Shahram Bagheri-Hariri, Seyedhosien Seyedhoseini-Davarani, Mo Afkar, Hamed Basirghafoori, Mojtaba Sedaghat, Shervin Farahmand, Niloofar Ayoobi-Yazdi, Mona Arbab, and Neda Shahlafar
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Radiography, Abdominal ,Group based ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Contrast Media ,Computed tomography ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Radiologists ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Observer Variation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Reproducibility of Results ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Patient management ,Child, Preschool ,Emergency medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,Radiology ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Hospital stay - Abstract
In this study, the impact of contrast-enhanced abdominopelvic CT scan interpretations by emergency medicine team on patients’ morbidity and mortality was evaluated and their interpretations were compared to radiologists’ reports. During a 3-month period, all patients who had undergone a contrast-enhanced abdominopelvic CT scan at the emergency department enrolled in this study. All CT scans were interpreted blindly by the emergency medicine (ED) attending physicians and the patients were treated accordingly. Radiologists reported all the CT scans within 12 h. Radiologists’ reports were put into the agreement or disagreement group retrospectively. A panel of experts further evaluated the disagreement groups’ medical charts and placed them in clinically significant or insignificant group based on the follow-up for 28 days. In this study, 170 CT scans were interpreted. The agreement rate was 68.2%. In the clinically significant disagreement group, eight patients did not receive the required treatment and three patients were over treated. Although the overall mortality rate was 5, none could have been prevented by a prompt radiologist’s report. The disagreement group had longer hospital stay (p = 0.006) and transfer to other wards (p = 0.035). The inter-rater reliability between emergency medicine attending physicians and attending radiologists was substantial (kappa = 0.77) and statistically significant (p more...
- Published
- 2017
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