Radiology Reporting in the Era of Patient-Centered Care: How Can We Improve Readability?

被引:0
作者
Siya Patil
Joseph H. Yacoub
Xue Geng
Susan M. Ascher
Ross W. Filice
机构
[1] Georgetown University School of Medicine,Department of Radiology
[2] MedStar Georgetown University Hospital,Department of Biostatistics, Bioinformatics and Biomathematics
[3] Georgetown University Medical Center,Department of Radiology
[4] MedStar Georgetown University Hospital,Department of Radiology
[5] MedStar Georgetown University Hospital,undefined
来源
Journal of Digital Imaging | 2021年 / 34卷
关键词
Report; Readability; Patient-centered care; Quality improvement;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Radiology reports are consumed not only by referring physicians and healthcare providers, but also by patients. We assessed report readability in our enterprise and implemented a two-part quality improvement intervention with the goal of improving report accessibility. A total of 491,813 radiology reports from ten hospitals within the enterprise from May to October, 2018 were collected. We excluded echocardiograms, rehabilitation reports, administrator reports, and reports with negative scores leaving 461,219 reports and report impressions for analysis. A grade level (GL) was calculated for each report and impression by averaging four readability metrics. Next, we conducted a readability workshop and distributed weekly emails with readability GLs over a period of 6 months to each attending radiologist at our primary institution. Following this intervention, we utilized the same exclusion criteria and analyzed 473,612 reports from May to October, 2019. The mean GL for all reports and report impressions was above 13 at every hospital in the enterprise. Following our intervention, a statistically significant drop in GL for reports and impressions was demonstrated at all locations, but a larger and significant improvement was observed in impressions at our primary site. Radiology reports across the enterprise are written at an advanced reading level making them difficult for patients and their families to understand. We observed a significantly larger drop in GL for impressions at our primary site than at all other sites following our intervention. Radiologists at our home institution improved their report readability after becoming more aware of their writing practices.
引用
收藏
页码:367 / 373
页数:6
相关论文
共 60 条
[1]  
Bruno MA(2014)The “Open Letter”: radiologists reports in the era of patient web portals Journal of the American College of Radiology 11 863-867
[2]  
Petscavage-Thomas JM(2015)Patient-centered radiology RadioGraphics 35 1835-1846
[3]  
Mohr MJ(2009)Patient-centered radiology Academic Radiology 16 515-516
[4]  
Bell SK(2016)Alternative payment models in radiology: the legislative and regulatory roadmap for reform Journal of the American College of Radiology 13 1176-1181
[5]  
Brown SD(2017)JOURNAL CLUB: structured feedback from patients on actual radiology reports: a novel approach to improve reporting practices American Journal of Roentgenology 208 1262-1270
[6]  
Itri JN(2019)Readability of radiology reports: implications for patient-centered care Clinical Imaging 54 116-120
[7]  
Carlos RC(2019)Readability of lumbar spine MRI reports: will patients understand? American Journal of Roentgenology 212 602-606
[8]  
Silva E(2017)Simplified readability metric drives improvement of radiology reports: an experiment on ultrasound reports at a pediatric hospital Journal of Digital Imaging 30 710-717
[9]  
Mcginty GB(1975)A computer readability formula designed for machine scoring Journal of Applied Psychology 60 283-284
[10]  
Hughes DR(1970)Derivation and validation of the automated readability index for use with technical materials Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 12 457-564