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Question Based Reporting

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I'd just like to talk for a second about how to produce

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the kind of report that the clinician is looking for.

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Now, in doing that,

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we're going to be talking about something that I least

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I think I'm going to call question-based reporting.

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Now, if you ask a clinician,

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what is it about radiologists that drives you nuts?

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I know exactly what they're going to say,

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and it's that the radiologist never answers the

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question. I've heard it a thousand times.

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Now, as a radiologist,

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you're thinking, hey,

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I looked at all three words of that history that

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you provided. There's no question there.

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So what's kind of going on here?

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Well, I think that on reflection,

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we have to kind of realize that if there is a CT or MRI

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ordered, there has got to be a clinical question.

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Now, that question could be a very basic one,

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such as is this patient crazy or is there

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something really wrong with them?

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But there's always an overarching question

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behind every scan that's ordered.

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What is my next step with this patient?

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So we have to start looking at these images in that

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light and try to use our clinical knowledge to figure

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out what the question the clinician is really trying to

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answer is and make sure that the report

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is structured in a way that does that.

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So let me give you an example since we're going to

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be talking about Sella, okay?

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So you get a case.

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It's a Sella study,

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and the brief history that's provided is

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acute onset of headache and diplopia.

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So is there a question there?

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Well, actually there is,

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and a very important question because what the

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clinician is asking in this instance is,

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does this patient have pituitary apoplexy?

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Okay. Because headache,

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diplopia are the signs of onset of pituitary apoplexy.

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So your first conclusion,

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and now I'm talking before we've even looked at the

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images, we know what it is, which is pituitary apoplexy.

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Yes or no? Okay.

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So when we kind of look at it from

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the standpoint of the clinician,

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this is the structure that the report is going to take.

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We were kind of replicating in our own minds the

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questions that the clinician has and making sure that

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the report is structured in a way that gets right

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to those questions right off the bat.

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Okay.

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So that's what we're going to be working on

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in this video and the subsequent ones.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Vascular

Sella

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

MRI

Head and Neck

CT

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