The role of quantitative feedback in coronary angiography radiation reduction

Objective. To evaluate the benefits of radiation education with and without feedback reporting in altering clinician radiation use behaviour in performing coronary angiography (CA). Design. A retrospective review of radiation use (fluoroscopy time) in coronary angiograms performed between July 1996...

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Published in:International journal for quality in health care Vol. 23; no. 3; pp. 342 - 348
Main Authors: SMITH, IAN R., FOSTER, KELLEY A., BRIGHOUSE, RUSSELL D., CAMERON, JAMES, RIVERS, JOHN T.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Oxford University Press 01-06-2011
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Summary:Objective. To evaluate the benefits of radiation education with and without feedback reporting in altering clinician radiation use behaviour in performing coronary angiography (CA). Design. A retrospective review of radiation use (fluoroscopy time) in coronary angiograms performed between July 1996 and December 2005 by 10 cardiologists to assess the impact of various interventions aimed at minimizing radiation risk. The impact of interventions such as education and audit/feedback was correlated against radiation use using cumulative sum and cumulative expected minus observed charts. Setting. Private Hospital in Brisbane, Australia. Participants. Ten cardiologists. Intervention. Education and audit/feedback. Results. Baseline radiation use subject to standard guidelines was stable. Group performance charts show a modest transient improvement in radiation use associated with an education intervention alone. However, regular detailed personalized feedback comparing an individual's radiation use to group and external benchmarks was successful in achieving sustained reduction in overall radiation use. For individual participants, significant improvement was noted in 7 of 10 cardiologists. Conclusion. Although an improved theoretical understanding of effective radiation hygiene strategies might contribute to reduced radiation use, this study suggests that regular detailed quantitative feedback supporting education is an effective tool in altering radiation use in CA. Understanding triggers that stimulate change in clinician behaviour is critical to the design of systems to optimize clinical performance. Confidentially reported benchmarking systems may be a useful tool to alter clinician behaviour.
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ISSN:1353-4505
1464-3677
DOI:10.1093/intqhc/mzr014