Structured reporting of head and neck ultrasound examinations

Reports of head and neck ultrasound examinations are frequently written by hand as free texts. Naturally, quality and structure of free text reports is variable, depending on the examiner's individual level of experience. Aim of the present study was to compare the quality of free text reports...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC medical imaging 2019-03, Vol.19 (1), p.25-25, Article 25
Hauptverfasser: Ernst, Benjamin P, Hodeib, Mohamed, Strieth, Sebastian, Künzel, Julian, Bischof, Fabian, Hackenberg, Berit, Huppertz, Tilmann, Weber, Veronika, Bahr, Katharina, Eckrich, Jonas, Hagemann, Jan, Engelbarts, Matthias, Froelich, Matthias F, Solbach, Philipp, Linke, Richard, Matthias, Christoph, Sommer, Wieland H, Becker, Sven
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Reports of head and neck ultrasound examinations are frequently written by hand as free texts. Naturally, quality and structure of free text reports is variable, depending on the examiner's individual level of experience. Aim of the present study was to compare the quality of free text reports (FTR) and structured reports (SR) of head and neck ultrasound examinations. Both standard FTRs and SRs of head and neck ultrasound examinations of 43 patients were acquired by nine independent examiners with comparable levels of experience. A template for structured reporting of head and neck ultrasound examinations was created using a web-based approach. FTRs and SRs were evaluated with regard to overall quality, completeness, required time to completion, and readability by four independent raters with different specializations (Paired Wilcoxon test, 95% CI) and inter-rater reliability was assessed (Fleiss' kappa). A questionnaire was used to compare FTRs vs. SRs with respect to user satisfaction (Mann-Whitney U test, 95% CI). By comparison, completeness scores of SRs were significantly higher than FTRs' completeness scores (94.4% vs. 45.6%, p 
ISSN:1471-2342
1471-2342
DOI:10.1186/s12880-019-0325-5