不要眨眼:在解读放射科报告时无意失明

BJR open Pub Date : 2021-11-19 DOI:10.1259/bjro.20210030
Malcolm M. Kates, P. Perche, R. Beyth, D. Winchester
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:由无意失明(IAB)引起的医疗差错可能导致患者的不良预后。尚未在审查书面放射学报告的背景下对IAB进行研究。这个横断面,欺骗控制的研究测量了医生在解释书面放射报告时对意外刺激的IAB。方法:要求来自不同领域的医师和住院医师解读四份放射学文本报告。其中一个是一个意想不到的刺激(要么是一个异常放置的医学检查发现,要么是热门电视节目《神秘博士》中的一段非医学引用)。主要结果是两种刺激的检出率的差异。次要结果是基于培训水平和专业的检出率差异。结果:47.8% (n = 43)的被试检测到意外刺激;非药物刺激的检出率高于药物刺激(75.0% vs 21.7%,优势比10.8,95%可信区间4.1 ~ 28.7;P < 0.0001)。在训练水平或专业之间没有观察到结果的差异。结论:只有少数医生在解释书面放射报告时成功检测到意外刺激。他们更容易发现异常的非医疗刺激而不是医疗刺激。研究结果与培训水平或医疗实践领域无关。知识的进步:这项研究首次表明,在解释书面放射学报告时,内科、家庭医学和急诊医学提供者确实存在IAB。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Don’t blink: inattentional blindness in radiology report interpretation
Objectives: Medical errors attributable to inattentional blindness (IAB) may contribute to adverse patient outcomes. IAB has not been studied in the context of reviewing written radiological reports. This cross-sectional, deception-controlled study measures IAB of physicians towards an unexpected stimulus while interpreting written radiological reports. Methods: Physicians and residents from multiple fields were asked to interpret four radiology text reports. Embedded in one was an unexpected stimulus (either an abnormally placed medical exam finding or a non-medical quote from the popular television show Doctor Who). Primary outcomes were differences in detection rates for the two stimuli. Secondary outcomes were differences in detection rates based on level of training and specialty. Results: The unexpected stimulus was detected by 47.8% (n = 43) of participants; the non-medical stimulus was detected more often than the medical stimulus (75.0% vs  21.7%, odds ratio 10.8, 95% confidence interval 4.1–28.7; p < 0.0001). No differences in outcomes were observed between training levels or specialties. Conclusion: Only a minority of physicians successfully detected an unexpected stimulus while interpreting written radiological reports. They were more likely to detect an abnormal non-medical stimulus than a medical stimulus. Findings were independent of the level of training or field of medical practice. Advances in knowledge: This study is the first to show that IAB is indeed present among internal medicine, family medicine, and emergency medicine providers when interpreting written radiology reports.
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