COVID-19 Pandemic Impact on Decreased Imaging Utilization: A Single Institutional Experience

Predictive models and anecdotal articles suggest radiology practices were losing 50%-70% of their normal imaging volume during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using actual institutional data, we investigated the change in imaging utilization and revenue during this public health crisis. Imaging performed wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic radiology 2020-09, Vol.27 (9), p.1204-1213
Hauptverfasser: Parikh, Keval D., Ramaiya, Nikhil H., Kikano, Elias G., Tirumani, Sree Harsha, Pandya, Himanshu, Stovicek, Bart, Sunshine, Jeffrey L., Plecha, Donna M.
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container_end_page 1213
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1204
container_title Academic radiology
container_volume 27
creator Parikh, Keval D.
Ramaiya, Nikhil H.
Kikano, Elias G.
Tirumani, Sree Harsha
Pandya, Himanshu
Stovicek, Bart
Sunshine, Jeffrey L.
Plecha, Donna M.
description Predictive models and anecdotal articles suggest radiology practices were losing 50%-70% of their normal imaging volume during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using actual institutional data, we investigated the change in imaging utilization and revenue during this public health crisis. Imaging performed within the 8-week span between March 8 and April 30, 2020 was categorized into the COVID-19 healthcare crisis timeframe. The first week of this date range and the 10 weeks prior were used to derive the normal practice expected volume. A rolling 7-day total value was used for volume tracking and comparison. Total imaging utilization was derived and organized by patient setting (outpatient, inpatient, emergency) and imaging modality (X-ray, CT, Mammography, MRI, Nuclear Medicine/PET, US). The three highest volume hospitals were analyzed. Revenue information was collected from the hospital billing system. System-wide imaging volume decreased by 55% between April 7 and 13, 2020. Outpatient exams decreased by 68% relative to normal practice. Emergency exams decreased by 48% and inpatient exams declined by 31%. Mammograms and nuclear medicine scans were the most affected modalities, decreasing by 93% and 61%, respectively. The main campus hospital experienced less relative imaging volume loss compared to the other smaller and outpatient-driven hospitals. At its lowest point, the technical component revenue from main campus imaging services demonstrated a 49% negative variance from normal practice. The trends and magnitude of the actual imaging utilization data presented will help inform evidence-based decisions for more accurate volume predictions, policy changes, and institutional preparedness for current and future pandemics.
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Using actual institutional data, we investigated the change in imaging utilization and revenue during this public health crisis. Imaging performed within the 8-week span between March 8 and April 30, 2020 was categorized into the COVID-19 healthcare crisis timeframe. The first week of this date range and the 10 weeks prior were used to derive the normal practice expected volume. A rolling 7-day total value was used for volume tracking and comparison. Total imaging utilization was derived and organized by patient setting (outpatient, inpatient, emergency) and imaging modality (X-ray, CT, Mammography, MRI, Nuclear Medicine/PET, US). The three highest volume hospitals were analyzed. Revenue information was collected from the hospital billing system. System-wide imaging volume decreased by 55% between April 7 and 13, 2020. Outpatient exams decreased by 68% relative to normal practice. Emergency exams decreased by 48% and inpatient exams declined by 31%. Mammograms and nuclear medicine scans were the most affected modalities, decreasing by 93% and 61%, respectively. The main campus hospital experienced less relative imaging volume loss compared to the other smaller and outpatient-driven hospitals. At its lowest point, the technical component revenue from main campus imaging services demonstrated a 49% negative variance from normal practice. 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Mammograms and nuclear medicine scans were the most affected modalities, decreasing by 93% and 61%, respectively. The main campus hospital experienced less relative imaging volume loss compared to the other smaller and outpatient-driven hospitals. At its lowest point, the technical component revenue from main campus imaging services demonstrated a 49% negative variance from normal practice. 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subjects Betacoronavirus
Coronavirus Infections - diagnostic imaging
COVID-19
Emergency Service, Hospital
Humans
Imaging Utilization
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Multimodality
Pandemics
Pneumonia, Viral - diagnostic imaging
Radiology Department, Hospital
Radionuclide Imaging
SARS-CoV-2
title COVID-19 Pandemic Impact on Decreased Imaging Utilization: A Single Institutional Experience
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