The costs and effects of introducing selectively trained radiographers to an A&E reporting service: a retrospective controlled before and after study
- 1 June 2005
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 78 (930) , 499-505
- https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr/51196310
Abstract
The costs and effects of introducing selectively trained radiographers reporting accident and emergency (A&E) radiographs of the appendicular skeleton in a district general hospital were assessed using a retrospective controlled before and after design. Reference standard reports were compared with a random stratified sample of 200 A&E and 200 general practitioner (GP) reports before and after the intervention. GP reports were used as a non-intervention, non-equivalent control group. An A&E specialist registrar judged whether incorrect A&E reports might have a clinically important effect on patient management. The effect of incorrect A&E reports on outcome was assessed by patient re-attendance to the hospital because of missed abnormalities. The annual, average and incremental costs of radiographers and radiologists reporting A&E radiographs were calculated and a sensitivity analysis was undertaken. The introduction of the radiographers resulted in a 1% (95% CI −7.9 to 5.9) fall in A&E radiograph reportin...Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Accident and Emergency and General Practitioner plain radiograph reporting by radiographers and radiologists: a quasi-randomized controlled trialThe British Journal of Radiology, 2003
- An assessment of different healthcare professionals’ attitudes towards radiographers’ reporting A&E filmsRadiography, 2002
- Measuring the Effects of Image Interpretation: An Evaluative FrameworkClinical Radiology, 2001
- Medical exposures, health surveillance and the Medical Exposures Directive.The British Journal of Radiology, 1999
- Plain film reporting by radiographers—a feasibility studyThe British Journal of Radiology, 1996
- A study to evaluate the introduction of a pattern recognition technique for chest radiographs by radiographersRadiography, 1996
- Reporting of fracture radiographs by radiographers: the impact of a training programmeThe British Journal of Radiology, 1994
- Value of radiograph audit in an accident service departmentInjury, 1992
- An assessment of the clinical effects of reporting accident and emergency radiographsThe British Journal of Radiology, 1980