Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?

Abstract The job of the diagnostic radiologist is two-fold: identifying and interpreting the information available from diagnostic imaging studies and communicating that interpretation meaningfully to the referring clinician. However skilled our interpretive abilities, our patients are not well serv...

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Main Author: Adrian P. Brady
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-03-01
Series:Insights into Imaging
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13244-018-0596-3
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spelling doaj-feb25254d4fb46f196a03036b019556f2020-11-25T00:13:55ZengSpringerOpenInsights into Imaging1869-41012018-03-019223724610.1007/s13244-018-0596-3Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?Adrian P. Brady0Radiology Department, Mercy University HospitalAbstract The job of the diagnostic radiologist is two-fold: identifying and interpreting the information available from diagnostic imaging studies and communicating that interpretation meaningfully to the referring clinician. However skilled our interpretive abilities, our patients are not well served if we fail to convey our conclusions effectively. Despite the central importance of communication skills to the work of radiologists, trainees rarely receive significant formal training in reporting skills, and much of the training given simply reflects the trainer’s personal preferences. Studies have shown a preference among referrers for reports in a structured form, with findings given in a standard manner, followed by a conclusion. The technical competence to incorporate structured report templates into PACS/RIS systems is growing, "...and radiology societies (including the European Society of Radiology (ESR)) are active in producing and validating templates for a wide range of modalities and clinical circumstances. While some radiologists may prefer prose format reports, and much literature has been produced addressing “dos and don’ts” for such prose reports, it seems likely that structured reporting will become the norm in the near future. Benefits will include homogenisation and standardisation of reports, certainty that significant information has not been omitted, and capacity for data-mining of structured reports for research and teaching purposes. Teaching Points • The radiologist’s job includes interpretation of imaging studies AND communication. • Traditionally, communication has taken the form of a prose report. • Referrers have been shown to prefer reports in a structured format. • Structured reports have many advantages over traditional prose reports. • It is likely that structured reports represent the future standard.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13244-018-0596-3Image interpretation, computer-assisted [E01.158.600]Quality assurance, health care [N05.700]Diagnostic imaging [E01.370.350]Observer variation [E01.354.753]Clinical decision-making [E01.055]
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adrian P. Brady
spellingShingle Adrian P. Brady
Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?
Insights into Imaging
Image interpretation, computer-assisted [E01.158.600]
Quality assurance, health care [N05.700]
Diagnostic imaging [E01.370.350]
Observer variation [E01.354.753]
Clinical decision-making [E01.055]
author_facet Adrian P. Brady
author_sort Adrian P. Brady
title Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?
title_short Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?
title_full Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?
title_fullStr Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?
title_full_unstemmed Radiology reporting—from Hemingway to HAL?
title_sort radiology reporting—from hemingway to hal?
publisher SpringerOpen
series Insights into Imaging
issn 1869-4101
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract The job of the diagnostic radiologist is two-fold: identifying and interpreting the information available from diagnostic imaging studies and communicating that interpretation meaningfully to the referring clinician. However skilled our interpretive abilities, our patients are not well served if we fail to convey our conclusions effectively. Despite the central importance of communication skills to the work of radiologists, trainees rarely receive significant formal training in reporting skills, and much of the training given simply reflects the trainer’s personal preferences. Studies have shown a preference among referrers for reports in a structured form, with findings given in a standard manner, followed by a conclusion. The technical competence to incorporate structured report templates into PACS/RIS systems is growing, "...and radiology societies (including the European Society of Radiology (ESR)) are active in producing and validating templates for a wide range of modalities and clinical circumstances. While some radiologists may prefer prose format reports, and much literature has been produced addressing “dos and don’ts” for such prose reports, it seems likely that structured reporting will become the norm in the near future. Benefits will include homogenisation and standardisation of reports, certainty that significant information has not been omitted, and capacity for data-mining of structured reports for research and teaching purposes. Teaching Points • The radiologist’s job includes interpretation of imaging studies AND communication. • Traditionally, communication has taken the form of a prose report. • Referrers have been shown to prefer reports in a structured format. • Structured reports have many advantages over traditional prose reports. • It is likely that structured reports represent the future standard.
topic Image interpretation, computer-assisted [E01.158.600]
Quality assurance, health care [N05.700]
Diagnostic imaging [E01.370.350]
Observer variation [E01.354.753]
Clinical decision-making [E01.055]
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13244-018-0596-3
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