| Literature DB >> 32493463 |
Julie Li1, Richard Paoloni2,3, Ling Li4, Joanne Callen4, Johanna I Westbrook4, William B Runciman5,6, Andrew Georgiou4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The inadequate follow-up of test results is a key patient safety concern, carrying severe consequences for care outcomes. Patients discharged from the emergency department are at particular risk of having test results pending at discharge due to their short lengths of stay, with many hospitals acknowledging that they do not have reliable systems for managing such results. Health information technology hold the potential to reducing errors in the test result management process. This study aimed to measure changes in the proportion of acknowledged radiology reports pre and post introduction of an electronic result acknowledgement system and to determine the proportion of reports with abnormal results, including clinically significant abnormal results requiring follow-up action.Entities:
Keywords: Duty to recontact; Evaluation studies; Medical errors; Medical informatics; Radiology
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32493463 PMCID: PMC7268495 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-020-01135-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Characteristics of study site
| Characteristicsa | Study Site |
|---|---|
| Hospital Beds | 450 |
| Emergency Department (ED) beds | 40 |
| Annual ED attendances | 58,483 |
| Annual ED discharges | 40,700 |
a All statistics reported over 2012–2013
Fig. 1Result acknowledgement pre-eRA implementation
Location of radiology result acknowledgement documentation by ED physicians
| Documentation of Radiology Result Acknowledgement | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Hard copy radiology report | 9 (0.8) |
| Progress notes (paper medical record) | 7 (0.6) |
| Electronic discharge summary | 1116 (95.6) |
| Electronic ED Case History notes (in eMR) | 26 (2.2) |
| Soft copy report (in eMR) | 5 (0.4) |
| Other | 4 (0.3) |
| Total | 1167 |
Classification of the likelihood and severity of morbidity of unacknowledged significant abnormal radiology reports
| Likelihood of Morbidity (N) | Severity of morbidity (N) | Direct extract from radiology report |
|---|---|---|
| Low (20) | Left mid zone air space infiltrate noted. The remainder of the lungs are clear. No significant pleural effusion bilaterally. Suggest progress imaging. | |
| Mod (5) | There is impression of superior mediastinal widening. This should be assessed further with departmental imaging, alternatively, comparison with previous imaging is recommended. No other significant finding of interest. | |
| High (2) | There is an irregular rounded opacity in the left upper lobe. This may represent an area of focal consolidation but underlying mass lesion must be considered and follow-up imaging to resolution is recommended. Attention ED director | |
| Low (6) | Ankle mortise is preserved. There is an acute posterior malleolar fracture. Soft tissue swelling noted around the ankle joint. | |
| Mod (16) | There is a joint effusion and a nondisplaced radial head fracture is suspected. | |
| High (5) | Cardiac mediastinal contours are within normal limits. There is a nodular opacity in the left lower lobe, measuring 2.2 × 1.4 cm in size. This may represent a primary or secondary pulmonary neoplastic lesion. The remainder of the lungs are clear. No significant pleural effusion bilaterally. Cardiac mediastinal contours are within normal limits. | |
| N/A | N/A |
Abnormal radiology result acknowledgement rates before and after eRA implementation
| Study Period | Total no. of abnormal test results | No. of results acknowledged (%; 95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| 553 | 396 (71.6; 67.8–75.4) | |
| 702 | 702 (100.0; 100.0–100.0) |
Fig. 2Result acknowledgement post-eRA implementation