| By
Charles Bankhead
Adoption
of a "scan-and-go" policy for elective CT studies resulted in a 43%
increase in study volume and elimination of a patient backlog, with
no adverse effect on patient care, a Boston radiologist reported at
an RSNA scientific session.
The primary
effect of the policy was to reduce the average CT study time by more
than a third, leaving more time for additional studies during a typical
work day.
"Adoption
of a scan-and-go policy improved scanner utilization by increasing patient
throughput," said Dr. Kevin Reynolds, a radiologist at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center. "After adoption of the policy, we reduced both fixed
and variable costs per CT scan. These benefits were achieved without
any obvious adverse effect on patient care."
The decision
to evaluate a scan-and-go strategy for non-urgent CT studies arose from
a 10-day scheduling backlog that had developed with a policy of radiologist-monitoring
of every CT study.
"This
was unsatisfactory to our physicians and could lead to a potential loss
of referrals," Reynolds said.
In October
1998, the medical center implemented a scan-and-go policy for all non-urgent
CT studies. The radiology department had more than 30 body CT protocols
at the time, and a radiologist selected a protocol in advance of each
study on the basis of clinical indications. The protocols provided specified
parameters such as injection volume, contrast, injection rate, scan
delay, and filming.
CT technologists
performed a preliminary review of each exam at the scanner. The technologists
were instructed to perform four monitoring checks of the studies: adequacy
of bowel opacification with oral preparation, adequacy of intravenous
contrast bolus, need for thin or delayed images, and the presence of
abnormal findings that would require immediate attention of the radiology
staff.
Attending
radiologists, with assistance from residents and fellows, performed
a complete review of CT studies twice daily. If a study was deemed inadequate,
the patient was asked to return at his or her convenience for a follow-up
study, which was performed free of charge to the patient.
Reynolds
and colleagues compared CT utilization for six-month periods before
and after implementation of the scan-and-go policy. They found that
the average study time declined from 19.5 minutes before the policy
to 12.5 minutes afterward. The seven-minute decrease in exam time permitted
a 43% increase in study volume: 4089 exams in the six months after the
protocol, versus 2853 exams in the six-month period before it.
"We accommodated
this increase in volume without additional CT technologists or scanners,"
Reynolds said. "The decrease in exam time helped us virtually eliminate
our scheduling backlog. We now perform CT studies within 24 hours of
request."
During
the initial six-month evaluation of the scan-and-go policy, five patients
had to return for repeat exams. The reasons were non-opacification of
the bowel (two cases), noncontrast enhancement of the liver, need for
thin sections of the pancreas, and need for rectal contrast.
|