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Emergency Medicine Resident Interpretation of Pediatric Radiographs

Authors :
Susan M. Fuchs
J. Eric Brunswick
Kaveh Ilkhanipour
David C. Seaberg
Source :
Academic Emergency Medicine. 3:790-793
Publication Year :
1996
Publisher :
Wiley, 1996.

Abstract

Objective: To examine the concordance of pediatric radiograph interpretation between emergency medicine residents (EMRs) and radiologists. Methods: A prospective, observational study was performed in a university pediatric ED with an annual census of 60,000 visits. Radiographs ordered by EMRs from December 1993 through October 1994 were initially interpreted solely by the EMR, with subsequent unmasked final review by attending radiology staff. Misinterpreted radiographs were placed into 3 categories. The groupings included overreads, underreads with no change in treatment, and underreads that required a change in treatment. Results: A total of 415 radiographs were interpreted by PGY1–3 residents. Overall concordance was found for 371 radiographs (89.4%). There were 44 misinterpretations (10.6%), with 24 (5.78%) overreads, 13 (3.13%) underreads, and 7 (1.69%) underreads that required follow-up interventions. Misinterpretations were similar for the different levels of training: The 5 most frequently ordered radiographs were chest (28%), ankle (7%), foot (6%), wrist (5%), and hand (5%). The most frequently misinterpreted radiographs were sinus, foot, shoulder, facial, and hand. Conclusion: 89.4% of all the radiographs interpreted by PGY1–3 residents were read correctly. Only 1.69% of the misinterpreted radiographs led to a change in management. Level of training did not significantly correlate with radiograph misinterpretation rates.

Details

ISSN :
15532712 and 10696563
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Academic Emergency Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa3026324e6f0879518a0be0cc6f1d92
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1553-2712.1996.tb03516.x