Shedding the Light on the Off-Hours Problem in Radiology.
Christopher G RothGilda BoroumandJaydev K DavePublished in: American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality (2020)
Diagnostic error and diagnostic delays in health care are widespread. This article outlines an improvement effort targeting weekday evening inpatient radiology delays through staffing changes replacing trainees with faculty-trainee team coverage, pushing faculty coverage from 4 pm to 8 pm. Order-report turnaround times (TATs), critical findings TATs for pneumothorax and intracranial hemorrhage (ICH), and percentage meeting target were compared pre and post implementation for the 4 to 8 pm time frame using the Mann-Whitney U and χ2 tests, respectively. Stakeholder surveys assessed patient safety, morale, education, and operational efficiency. Median TATs (minutes) improved: X-rays 906 to 112, computed tomography 994 to 84, magnetic resonance imaging 1172 to 233, and ultrasound 88 to 58. Median critical findings TATs (minutes) improved from 853 to 30 and 112 to 22 for pneumothorax and ICH, respectively, and the percentage meeting target improved from 45% to 65%. Survey results reported perceived improvement in patient safety, education, and operational efficiency and no impact on morale.
Keyphrases
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- magnetic resonance imaging
- healthcare
- particulate matter
- computed tomography
- air pollution
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- heavy metals
- affordable care act
- artificial intelligence
- mental health
- water soluble
- cross sectional
- palliative care
- physical activity
- medical students
- contrast enhanced
- primary care
- depressive symptoms
- risk assessment
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- image quality
- health insurance
- general practice
- ultrasound guided
- dual energy