Clinical imaging guidelines part 4: challenges in identifying, engaging and collaborating with stakeholders.
The effective development and use of clinical imaging guidelines requires an understanding of who the stakeholders are, what their interests in the process are, and what roles they should play. If the appropriate stakeholders are not engaged in the right roles, it is unlikely that clinical imaging guidelines will be successfully developed, relied on, and actually used. Some stakeholders are obvious: for the development of clinical imaging guidelines, both imagers and those who request examinations, such as general practitioners, internists, and medical specialists, must be involved. To gain acceptance, other relevant groups are stakeholders, including medical societies, other health care professionals, insurers, health IT experts and vendors, and patients. The role of stakeholders must be dictated by their specific interest. For some, involvement in the creation of guidelines is the right role. For others, such as regulators or insurers, reviews or invitations to comment are required, and for others, such as medical educators, it is probably sufficient to provide information and create awareness. Only through a careful consideration of who the stakeholders are and what are their interests are the successful development, acceptance, and use of clinical imaging guidelines likely to occur. Future efforts must focus on collaboration, particularly among groups that create clinical imaging guidelines and those that can support their use, and on regulatory roles and mandates.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Radiology
- Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Organizational Objectives
- Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
- Models, Organizational
- Evidence-Based Medicine
- Decision Making
- Cooperative Behavior
- 3202 Clinical sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Radiology
- Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Organizational Objectives
- Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
- Models, Organizational
- Evidence-Based Medicine
- Decision Making
- Cooperative Behavior
- 3202 Clinical sciences