Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review

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Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review. / Schreyer, Andreas G.; Schneider, Katharina; Dendl, Lena Marie; Jaehn, Philipp; Molwitz, Isabel; Westphalen, Kerstin; Holmberg, Christine.

In: ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG, Vol. 194, No. 8, 08.2022, p. 873-881.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Schreyer, AG, Schneider, K, Dendl, LM, Jaehn, P, Molwitz, I, Westphalen, K & Holmberg, C 2022, 'Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review', ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG, vol. 194, no. 8, pp. 873-881. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1735-3552

APA

Schreyer, A. G., Schneider, K., Dendl, L. M., Jaehn, P., Molwitz, I., Westphalen, K., & Holmberg, C. (2022). Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review. ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG, 194(8), 873-881. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1735-3552

Vancouver

Schreyer AG, Schneider K, Dendl LM, Jaehn P, Molwitz I, Westphalen K et al. Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review. ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG. 2022 Aug;194(8):873-881. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-1735-3552

Bibtex

@article{f1a5e384595e4e8eb736a6ff76eae6c6,
title = "Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review",
abstract = "Background Patient centered radiology represents a crucial aspect for modern sustainable radiology. The definition of patient-centered consists of a focus on patients{\textquoteright} individual values and wishes with a respectful integration in medical decisions. In this narrative review we try to give a practical introduction into this complex topic with the extension to a person-centered radiology, which additionally encompasses values and wishes of radiological and other medical colleagues.Methods Medline search between 2010 and 2021 using “patient-centered radiology” with additional subjective selection of articles for this narrative review.Results Regarding patients{\textquoteright} experiences the main literature focus were patients{\textquoteright} fears of examinations (movement restrictions, uncertainty). Most patients would prefer a direct communication with the radiologist after the examination. Regarding interdisciplinary communication the radiological expertise and quality is highly appreciated; however, there was a general wish for more structured- or itemized reporting. Concerning working conditions radiologists were satisfied despite high psychosocial working pressure.Conclusion Most of the literature on this topic consists of surveys evaluating the current state. Studies on interventions such as improved information before examinations or patient-readable reports are still scarce. There is a dilemma between an increasing radiological workload and the simultaneous wish for more patient-centered approaches such as direct radiologist-patient communications in the daily routine. Still on our way to a more value-based radiology we have to focus on patient communications and a patient-centered medicine.",
author = "Schreyer, {Andreas G.} and Katharina Schneider and Dendl, {Lena Marie} and Philipp Jaehn and Isabel Molwitz and Kerstin Westphalen and Christine Holmberg",
year = "2022",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1055/a-1735-3552",
language = "English",
volume = "194",
pages = "873--881",
journal = "ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG",
issn = "1438-9029",
publisher = "Georg Thieme Verlag KG",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Patient Centered Radiology – An Introduction in Form of a Narrative Review

AU - Schreyer, Andreas G.

AU - Schneider, Katharina

AU - Dendl, Lena Marie

AU - Jaehn, Philipp

AU - Molwitz, Isabel

AU - Westphalen, Kerstin

AU - Holmberg, Christine

PY - 2022/8

Y1 - 2022/8

N2 - Background Patient centered radiology represents a crucial aspect for modern sustainable radiology. The definition of patient-centered consists of a focus on patients’ individual values and wishes with a respectful integration in medical decisions. In this narrative review we try to give a practical introduction into this complex topic with the extension to a person-centered radiology, which additionally encompasses values and wishes of radiological and other medical colleagues.Methods Medline search between 2010 and 2021 using “patient-centered radiology” with additional subjective selection of articles for this narrative review.Results Regarding patients’ experiences the main literature focus were patients’ fears of examinations (movement restrictions, uncertainty). Most patients would prefer a direct communication with the radiologist after the examination. Regarding interdisciplinary communication the radiological expertise and quality is highly appreciated; however, there was a general wish for more structured- or itemized reporting. Concerning working conditions radiologists were satisfied despite high psychosocial working pressure.Conclusion Most of the literature on this topic consists of surveys evaluating the current state. Studies on interventions such as improved information before examinations or patient-readable reports are still scarce. There is a dilemma between an increasing radiological workload and the simultaneous wish for more patient-centered approaches such as direct radiologist-patient communications in the daily routine. Still on our way to a more value-based radiology we have to focus on patient communications and a patient-centered medicine.

AB - Background Patient centered radiology represents a crucial aspect for modern sustainable radiology. The definition of patient-centered consists of a focus on patients’ individual values and wishes with a respectful integration in medical decisions. In this narrative review we try to give a practical introduction into this complex topic with the extension to a person-centered radiology, which additionally encompasses values and wishes of radiological and other medical colleagues.Methods Medline search between 2010 and 2021 using “patient-centered radiology” with additional subjective selection of articles for this narrative review.Results Regarding patients’ experiences the main literature focus were patients’ fears of examinations (movement restrictions, uncertainty). Most patients would prefer a direct communication with the radiologist after the examination. Regarding interdisciplinary communication the radiological expertise and quality is highly appreciated; however, there was a general wish for more structured- or itemized reporting. Concerning working conditions radiologists were satisfied despite high psychosocial working pressure.Conclusion Most of the literature on this topic consists of surveys evaluating the current state. Studies on interventions such as improved information before examinations or patient-readable reports are still scarce. There is a dilemma between an increasing radiological workload and the simultaneous wish for more patient-centered approaches such as direct radiologist-patient communications in the daily routine. Still on our way to a more value-based radiology we have to focus on patient communications and a patient-centered medicine.

U2 - 10.1055/a-1735-3552

DO - 10.1055/a-1735-3552

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 194

SP - 873

EP - 881

JO - ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG

JF - ROFO-FORTSCHR RONTG

SN - 1438-9029

IS - 8

ER -