ASRT NEWS
New study finds that
adding photo of patients to x-ray images can reduce wrong patient errors.
Adding a photo of a face to
x-ray images can reduce "wrong-patient" errors five-fold, a new study
finds.
"X-rays can look alike,
and if one patient's images are confused with another before the radiologist
sees them, it can be difficult for the radiologist to determine there is a
mismatch," said Dr. Srini Tridandapani, of Emory University and an author
of the study.
As part of the study, ten
radiologists interpreted 20 pairs of radiographic images with and without
photographs. Two to four mismatched pairs were included in each set of 20 pairs
of images. When photographs were added, radiologists correctly identified the
mismatch 64% of the time. The error detection rate was about 13% when
photographs were not included, said Dr. Tridandapani.
The radiologists in the study
did not know they could use the photographs as a means to identify mismatched
x-ray images, and some said they purposely ignored the photographs because they
thought the study was designed to determine if a photograph would distract
them. "We did a second study of five radiologists, and we told them to use
the photographs. The error detection rate went up to 94% in the second
study," said Dr. Tridandapani.
Surprisingly, the
interpretation time went down in the first study when the photographs were
added to the images, said Dr. Tridandapani. "We're not sure why this
happened, but it could be because the photograph provided clinical clues that
assisted the radiologist in making the diagnosis," he said.
"I estimate that about 1
out of 10,000 examinations have wrong-patient errors," Dr. Tridandapani
said. "It occurred to me that we should be adding a photograph to every
medical imaging study as a means to correct this problem after I received a
phone call, and a picture of the caller appeared on my phone. The picture
immediately identified for me who the caller was," he said.
The study required additional
personnel to take the pictures of the patients immediately after the patients'
x-ray examination. However, Dr. Tridandapani and his colleagues have developed
a prototype system where the camera can be attached to a portable x-ray
machine; the picture is taken without additional personnel.
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