Literature DB >> 29536934

Improving diagnosis in health care: perspectives from the American College of Radiology.

Bibb Allen1, Mythreyi Chatfield2, Judy Burleson2, William T Thorwarth2.   

Abstract

In September of 2014, the American College of Radiology joined a number of other organizations in sponsoring the 2015 National Academy of Medicine report, Improving Diagnosis In Health Care. Our presentation to the Academy emphasized that although diagnostic errors in imaging are commonly considered to result only from failures in disease detection or misinterpretation of a perceived abnormality, most errors in diagnosis result from failures in information gathering, aggregation, dissemination and ultimately integration of that information into our patients' clinical problems. Diagnostic errors can occur at any point on the continuum of imaging care from when imaging is first considered until results and recommendations are fully understood by our referring physicians and patients. We used the concept of the Imaging Value Chain and the ACR's Imaging 3.0 initiative to illustrate how better information gathering and integration at each step in imaging care can mitigate many of the causes of diagnostic errors. Radiologists are in a unique position to be the aggregators, brokers and disseminators of information critical to making an informed diagnosis, and if radiologists were empowered to use our expertise and informatics tools to manage the entire imaging chain, diagnostic errors would be reduced and patient outcomes improved. Heath care teams should take advantage of radiologists' ability to fully manage information related to medical imaging, and simultaneously, radiologists must be ready to meet these new challenges as health care evolves. The radiology community stands ready work with all stakeholders to design and implement solutions that minimize diagnostic errors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  diagnosis; diagnostic error; imaging; patient safety; perception; performance improvement; radiology

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29536934     DOI: 10.1515/dx-2017-0020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diagnosis (Berl)        ISSN: 2194-802X


  1 in total

1.  Augmented Radiology: Looking Over the Horizon.

Authors:  Christie M Lincoln; Ritodhi Chatterjee; Marc H Willis
Journal:  Radiol Artif Intell       Date:  2019-01-30
  1 in total

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