Applications of justification and optimization in medical imaging: examples of clinical guidance for computed tomography use in emergency medicine.
Published
Journal Article
Availability, reliability, and technical improvements have led to continued expansion of computed tomography (CT) imaging. During a CT scan, there is substantially more exposure to ionizing radiation than with conventional radiography. This has led to questions and critical conclusions about whether the continuous growth of CT scans should be subjected to review and potentially restraints or, at a minimum, closer investigation. This is particularly pertinent to populations in emergency departments, such as children and patients who receive repeated CT scans for benign diagnoses. During the last several decades, among national medical specialty organizations, the American College of Emergency Physicians and the American College of Radiology have each formed membership working groups to consider value, access, and expedience and to promote broad acceptance of CT protocols and procedures within their disciplines. Those efforts have had positive effects on the use criteria for CT by other physician groups, health insurance carriers, regulators, and legislators.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Sierzenski, PR; Linton, OW; Amis, ES; Courtney, DM; Larson, PA; Mahesh, M; Novelline, RA; Frush, DP; Mettler, FA; Timins, JK; Tenforde, TS; Boice, JD; Brink, JA; Bushberg, JT; Schauer, DA
Published Date
- January 2014
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 11 / 1
Start / End Page
- 36 - 44
PubMed ID
- 24135540
Pubmed Central ID
- 24135540
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1558-349X
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1016/j.jacr.2013.09.023
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- United States