Investigating Hospital Deaths: Radiology Investigation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 19
About This Presentation
Title:

Investigating Hospital Deaths: Radiology Investigation

Description:

Aug 2004, Coroner convened a Radiology forum. response to specific death ... standardised approach to the investigation of deaths where Radiology is involved ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:39
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: drchriso
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Investigating Hospital Deaths: Radiology Investigation


1
Investigating Hospital DeathsRadiology
Investigation
  • Dr Chris ODonnell
  • Radiologist
  • June 2005

2
Introduction
  • Aug 2004, Coroner convened a Radiology forum
  • response to specific death investigations
  • multiple contributors (stakeholders)
  • Aim
  • standardised approach to the investigation of
    deaths where Radiology is involved
  • benchmark for hospitals (a la falls protocol)
  • prevention

3
Overview
  • what is radiological practice?
  • how has it worked in the past?
  • current issues/problems affecting that practice
  • what needs to be done to address those issues
    (risk management)
  • Coronial impact
  • outcomes

4
Current/Future role of Radiology
  • increased sophistication
  • increased utilisation
  • increased clinical dependence
  • more Radiology/Radiologists
  • pressure to be quick and to be accurate
  • e.g. appendicitis

5
Radiological process
  • decision to investigate
  • request issued for examination (referral)
  • examination performed
  • images available
  • Radiologist interprets and issues a report
  • report returned to referrer
  • appropriate practitioner takes action

6
Historical
  • clinical experience of referrer
  • paper/film based (analogue)
  • 9 5 (no weekends)
  • low tech radiographs
  • referring doctor reviews and awaits final report
  • management often minimally altered by that report

7
Historical problems
  • junior doctors - inexperienced
  • paper/film based - gets lost
  • 9 5 (no weekends) pts sick at all hours
  • low tech radiographs inadequate Dx
  • referring doctor reviews and awaits final report
    delayed or missed Dx
  • management rarely altered delayed treatment or
  • all above issues before the coroner

8
Issues affecting change
  • complexity of modern medical practice and
    sophistication of the radiological imaging
  • increased reliance on imaging to manage patients
  • radiological triage
  • desire to sort patients out prior to admission
    not admit for observation as in the past
  • administrative push to have patients transit
    through ED lt 8 hrs
  • financial imperative
  • not enough radiologists for full time access
  • perceived need for universality of medical care
  • rural/remote

9
The ideal
  • everyone who needs a test gets the appropriate
    one
  • nothing gets lost!
  • 24/7
  • sophisticated imaging techniques (multislice
    CT/MRI/bedside US)
  • instant Radiological report transmitted
    immediately to referrer
  • acute specialist management based on that report

10
Solutions
  • defined imaging protocols or pathways
  • fully integrated digital system (request and
    images)
  • Radiologists available 24/7
  • not necessarily in Department c/o teleradiology
  • instant on line reporting
  • automated report transmission to referrer
  • specified results leading to notification of
    specific clinicians
  • information acted upon leading to management
    change

11
Industry solution
  • PACS
  • picture archive and communication system

12
Digital Radiological process
  • patient slots into a clinical pathway
  • request for examination on line
  • examination performed digital image
  • Radiologist issues a report on line
  • report returned to referrer electronic post-box
  • appropriate practitioner takes action automated
    traffic lights

13
Where are we now?
14
What most of us are doing
  • requests based on experience of the doctor
  • mixed low tech/digital e.g. paper request,
    digital reporting
  • 9 5, M - F with reduced after-hours
  • lot of low tech imaging increasing sophisticated
    (CT)
  • referring doctors after hours review plain films
    with some help from Radiologists (interim verbal
    reports)
  • indecision and conflict
  • some patient's management compromised
  • Health Services Commissioner, Courts, Coroner

15
fully digital downsides
  • too much reliance on protocol
  • excessive use of resources
  • too much reliance on imaging
  • treating the X-ray not the patient!
  • cultural change for Radiologists/clinicians
  • more on-call
  • soft copy reporting i.e. computer screens not
    film
  • cost
  • getting cheaper
  • needs to be integrated (at least state based)
  • avoid the ß v VHS scenario
  • DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in
    Medicine)
  • patient privacy

16
Rural/remote
  • limited high tech
  • limited Radiologist access
  • reliance on non-specialists
  • need for a digital 2nd opinion!

17
Outcomes
  • efficiency (average bed stay)
  • improved diagnosis (audits)
  • less disasters (internal MM Coronial review)

18
Conclusion (1)
  • protocols will avoid patients falling through the
    net
  • fully digital will greatly assist the flow from
    request to patient management action
  • we need help to move through the transition from
    analogue to digital
  • technology is available
  • money is not (need for Governmental support)
  • need to involve clinicians
  • they need to understand the benefits
  • assist in the protocol formulation
  • they need to be part of the process of
    implementation not to have it imposed upon them
  • measure outcomes

19
Conclusion (2)
  • Coroners Radiology Investigation Standard
  • assist in investigation
  • help to push along the modernisation of the
    Radiological process
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com