Increased Patient Anxiety, Physician Overload Could Result from Patient Access to Imaging Results
By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 10 May 2010
Providing patients with direct access to their imaging test results could improve patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes. However, physicians are worried that it could lead to increased patient anxiety and unrealistic demands on physician time, according to recent findings.Posted on 10 May 2010
"Patients do not receive as much medical information as they want,” said Annette J. Johnson, M.D., M.S., lead author of the study, published in the April 2010 issue of the Journal of the American College of Radiology. "Given the manner in which test results are typically shared with patients, this dissatisfaction with information access is not surprising,” said Dr. Johnson.
The study, performed at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine (Winston-Salem, NC, USA), examined the possibility of radiologists using the Internet to communicate rapid online imaging results directly to patients. Eight radiologists and seven referring physicians participated in the study, which was composed of two focus groups.
Radiologists and referring physicians agreed that there are some potential benefits of an online system for patient access including increased patient satisfaction and the ability to offer patients hyperlinks to high quality educational material. However, with regard to potential disadvantages, radiologists and referring physicians offered several.
"The greatest concern revolved around patients' ability to understand written reports. Participants predicted that patients, who may not fully comprehend the report's content or place its meaning into proper context, would experience increased anxiety if they did not have prompt access to a physician to assist them in understanding the results and implications. They also thought that referring physicians and radiologists might experience a dramatically increased number of telephone calls from patients for clarification of report contents--an increase that they could not realistically accommodate,” noted Dr. Johnson.
Referring physicians were concerned that immediate patient access to reports would limit physicians' opportunity to prepare adequately for patient's consultative requests, possibly negatively affecting the physician's opportunity to guide management decisions correctly.
"While physicians participating in this study generally agreed that patients should take more responsibility for their own healthcare and be better informed, and that the system for reporting needs to be improved, only a small minority of radiologists and referring physicians supported patients being offered unlimited direct access to radiology test results,” Dr. Johnson concluded.
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Wake Forest University School of Medicine