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Published byNora Harrison Modified over 9 years ago
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Practice Quality Improvement - The Role of Subspecialty Societies
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Why should subspecialty societies be involved in PQI? Their members: - know the important questions - know the science and technology - know the relevant metrics May provide national benchmarking data
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Projects Developed by Subspecialty Societies Assist members with lifelong professional development Relevant to that subspecialty area Reasonable to accomplish
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Subspecialty Society PQI May be difficult for small societies to develop complete PQI programs Limited resources: - money - people - technical expertise and hardware limitations
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Subspecialty Society PQI Develop complete ABR-approved PQI projects Work with larger general radiology organizations Work with other subspecialty societies SPR + ASNR Pediatric Neuroradiology PQI project ASNR + SBI Ø
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Subspecialty Society PQI Important roles: - provide expertise to larger radiology organizations (ACR, ARRS, RSNA) - develop tools for larger societies or individuals to use in their PQI projects - help to develop relevant databases for that subspecialty benchmarking
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Radiologists are resistant to change Skeptical about new mandates such as MOC Most don’t understand MOC, especially PQI Don’t see the need PQI seems threatening – fear of consequences and discovery People respond better when they get information from their most closely aligned organization
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SBI Mammography already heavily regulated MQSA mandates medical audit
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SBI ACR BI-RADS has information for more complete audit NMDB could become a PQI benchmarking tool ACR product developed with SBI members
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SBI SBI managed by ACR and has long history of close alignment and collaboration SBI has limited resources for major projects
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Examples of Relatively Easy PQI Projects for SBI participation
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Accuracy of Interpretation National program, such as ACR RadPeer Double reading - intradepartmental - external review Comparison of interpretations with pathology results
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Practice Guidelines and Standards 2 Required One must be Communication, (reporting of urgent results) One component of another guideline related to your practice area
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Referring Physician Surveys Particularly relevant to breast imaging Reflect quality of practice ABR template survey Institutional survey IU School of Medicine Physician Peer-Review Survey Radiologist: Valerie Jackson, MD Please rank the radiologist’s performance in each area: 1 = poor, 5 = Excellent Accessibility 1 2 3 4 5 Accuracy of reports 1 2 3 4 5 Professionalism 1 2 3 4 5 Timeliness of reports 1 2 3 4 5 Quality of consultation 1 2 3 4 5 Interaction with patients 1 2 3 4 5
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