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Clinical Risk Management in radiology. Part II: applied examples and concluding remarks.

M Centonze1, D Visconti, S Doratiotto

  • 1U.O. di Radiologia, Ospedale S. Chiara di Trento, Trento, Italy. Maurizio.Centonze@apss.tn.it

La Radiologia Medica
|September 21, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study demonstrates practical risk assessment tools in radiology. It covers proactive analysis for CT scans and reactive analysis after a patient misidentification event in RIS-PACS.

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Area of Science:

  • Radiology and Medical Imaging
  • Healthcare Risk Management
  • Health Informatics

Background:

  • Evaluating risk in radiological settings is crucial for patient safety.
  • Understanding the application of risk assessment tools is essential for quality improvement.
  • Previous work has laid the groundwork for systematic risk evaluation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To provide a clearer understanding of risk evaluation tools in radiology.
  • To illustrate the practical application of these tools through real-world examples.
  • To enhance the safety and efficiency of radiological workflows.

Main Methods:

  • Proactive risk analysis applied to Computed Tomography (CT) examinations.
  • Reactive risk analysis conducted after a sentinel event involving a CT study.
  • Case study involving a wrong-patient misallocation within the Radiology Information System-Picture Archiving and Communication System (RIS-PACS).

Main Results:

  • Demonstrated the utility of proactive analysis in identifying potential risks before adverse events.
  • Highlighted the importance of reactive analysis in learning from and preventing future incidents.
  • Identified specific vulnerabilities in the RIS-PACS workflow leading to patient misidentification.

Conclusions:

  • Practical examples clarify the application of risk assessment tools in radiology.
  • Both proactive and reactive approaches are vital for comprehensive risk management.
  • Addressing system-level issues, such as RIS-PACS patient allocation, is key to preventing errors.