AI Article Synopsis

  • Radiologists in the UK are facing increasing pressure due to a rise in imaging volume and complexity, often reporting for long hours without adequate breaks, which can compromise quality and safety.
  • A survey of neuroradiologists revealed that many work for up to 12 hours a day with break durations averaging less than 15 minutes, often engaged in cognitively demanding tasks during these breaks.
  • Drawing comparisons with air traffic controllers, the study advocates for regulated working hours and breaks for radiologists to minimize fatigue-related errors and enhance patient safety, emphasizing the need for better standardization in their work practices.

Article Abstract

As the volume and complexity of imaging in the UK continues to rise, there is pressure on radiologists to spend increasing lengths of time reporting to cope with the growing workload. However, there is limited guidance for radiologists about structuring the working day to strike the necessary balance between achieving satisfactory reporting volume and maintaining quality and safety. We surveyed 86 neuroradiologists (receiving 59 responses), regarding time spent reporting, frequency and duration of work breaks, and break activities. Our results demonstrate that some neuroradiologists report for up to 12 h a day and for 4 h before taking a break. Mean duration of breaks is less than 15 min and these often consist of computer screen-based or cognitively demanding tasks. Many areas of medicine have looked to the aviation industry to develop improvements in safety through regulated, standardised practices. There are parallels between the work of air traffic controllers (ATCs) and radiologists. We review the legislation that controls the working hours of UK ATCs to minimise fatigue-related errors, and its scientific basis. We also consider the vigilance decrement, a concept in cognitive science which describes the reduction in performance with increasing time-on-task. We conclude that, in comparison with ATCs, work patterns among radiologists are poorly standardised and potentially dangerous. Evidence suggests that placing limits on reporting time and minimum break duration, as well as ensuring appropriate break activities, can benefit reporting quality. It is imperative that radiologists and managers heed these lessons, to improve standards and protect patients from error.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5965984PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1259/bjr.20170284DOI Listing

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