Unintended consequences: quantifying the benefits, iatrogenic harms and downstream cascade costs of musculoskeletal MRI in UK primary care.
Imran Mohammed SajidAnand ParkunanKathleen FrostPublished in: BMJ open quality (2021)
Unfettered GP-MSK-MRI use has reached unaccceptable indication creep and disutility. Considerable avoidable harm occurs through ubiquitous misinterpretation and salient low-value referral cascades for two-thirds of imaged patients, for almost no change in treatment. Any marginally earlier procedural intervention for a tiny fraction of patients is eclipsed by negative consequences for the vast majority. Only 1-2 patients need to be scanned for one to suffer mismanagement. Direct-access imaging is neither clinically, nor cost-effective and deimplementation could be considered in this setting. GP-MSK-MRI fuels unnecessary healthcare utilisation, generating nocebic patient beliefs and expectations, whilst appropriate care is delayed and a high burden of psychosocial barriers to recovery appear neglected.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- primary care
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- magnetic resonance imaging
- randomized controlled trial
- patient reported outcomes
- peritoneal dialysis
- palliative care
- mental health
- computed tomography
- mass spectrometry
- social media
- risk factors
- cross sectional
- combination therapy
- health insurance