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Disclosing harmful mammography errors to patients.

Authors :
Gallagher TH
Cook AJ
Brenner RJ
Carney PA
Miglioretti DL
Geller BM
Kerlikowske K
Onega TL
Rosenberg RD
Yankaskas BC
Lehman CD
Elmore JG
Source :
Radiology [Radiology] 2009 Nov; Vol. 253 (2), pp. 443-52. Date of Electronic Publication: 2009 Aug 25.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Purpose: To assess radiologists' attitudes about disclosing errors to patients by using a survey with a vignette involving an error interpreting a patient's mammogram, leading to a delayed cancer diagnosis.<br />Materials and Methods: We conducted an institutional review board-approved survey of 364 radiologists at seven geographically distinct Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium sites that interpreted mammograms from 2005 to 2006. Radiologists received a vignette in which comparison screening mammograms were placed in the wrong order, leading a radiologist to conclude calcifications were decreasing in number when they were actually increasing, delaying a cancer diagnosis. Radiologists were asked (a) how likely they would be to disclose this error, (b) what information they would share, and (c) their malpractice attitudes and experiences.<br />Results: Two hundred forty-three (67%) of 364 radiologists responded to the disclosure vignette questions. Radiologists' responses to whether they would disclose the error included "definitely not" (9%), "only if asked by the patient" (51%), "probably" (26%), and "definitely" (14%). Regarding information they would disclose, 24% would "not say anything further to the patient," 31% would tell the patient that "the calcifications are larger and are now suspicious for cancer," 30% would state "the calcifications may have increased on your last mammogram, but their appearance was not as worrisome as it is now," and 15% would tell the patient "an error occurred during the interpretation of your last mammogram, and the calcifications had actually increased in number, not decreased." Radiologists' malpractice experiences were not consistently associated with their disclosure responses.<br />Conclusion: Many radiologists report reluctance to disclose a hypothetical mammography error that delayed a cancer diagnosis. Strategies should be developed to increase radiologists' comfort communicating with patients.<br /> ((c) RSNA, 2009.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1527-1315
Volume :
253
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19710002
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2532082320