RSNA 2013 

Abstract Archives of the RSNA, 2013


LL-INS-TU2A

Radiology Reports: What YOU Think You're Saying and What THEY Think You're Saying

Scientific Informal (Poster) Presentations

Presented on December 3, 2013
Presented as part of LL-INS-TUA: Informatics - Tuesday Posters and Exhibits (12:15pm - 12:45pm)

Participants

Matt Whitehead MD, Presenter: Nothing to Disclose
Ryan Forbess MD, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose
Bonmyong Lee MD, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose

CONCLUSION

Sound physician communication is a critical component of quality healthcare delivery. Certain words and phrases carry different meanings for radiologists and clinicians. With structured reporting becoming more prevalent, the radiology lexicon should be defined in a more concrete manner. Ambiguous terms should be eliminated all together.

BACKGROUND

Image interpretation and translation into written language is an imperfect process. Yet, the radiology report represents the link between radiologist's opinion and patient's images. Increased access to images through remote viewing stations has made direct communication between radiologists and clinicians less commonplace. We are interested in how accurately the descriptive contents within radiology reports convey the feelings of the radiologist to the referring clinician. We hypothesize that certain words and phrases hold different connotations for radiologists and clinicians.

EVALUATION

A two part survey was designed. Medical specialty, level of training, and number of radiology reports read/week was contained in part I. Part II concerned the quantification of radiologists' diagnostic confidence in range percentages based on specific words and phrases. These voluntary surveys were emailed to all faculty at a single university medical center. Additional paper surveys were randomly distributed to medical students, residents, and physicians. A total of 100 completed surveys were collected (33 radiologists and 67 non-radiologists). Data was exported to EXCEL for statistical analysis. Direct comparisons were made between the survey answers from radiologists and non-radiolgists.

DISCUSSION

Percentile ranges for most radiologists and non-radiologists were in agreement in 26/36 questions. However, the absolute percentage value was somewhat variable. 10/36 questions generated discrepancy between radiologists and non-radiologists. The following words and phrases were in disagreement: "suggestive of", "evidence of", "probable", "no apparent", "none detected", "normal", "consider", "recommend", "suboptimal evaluation", and "mildly limited".

Cite This Abstract

Whitehead, M, Forbess, R, Lee, B, Radiology Reports: What YOU Think You're Saying and What THEY Think You're Saying.  Radiological Society of North America 2013 Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, December 1 - December 6, 2013 ,Chicago IL. http://archive.rsna.org/2013/13011184.html