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Trend and Factors Associated with Repeat Computed Tomography Examinations in Tertiary Hospitals: Linked Health Administrative Data in Western Australia
Author(s) -
Ngoc San Ha
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of population data science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.602
H-Index - 7
ISSN - 2399-4908
DOI - 10.23889/ijpds.v5i5.1446
Subject(s) - medicine , tertiary care , logistic regression , computed tomography , emergency medicine , radiology
IntroductionComputed tomography (CT) has become an essential part of clinical practice. However, repeat CT scans has raised a concern about unnecessary exposure to ionising radiation and waste of health care resource. While substantial effort is underway to reduce inappropriate use of diagnostic imaging tests including CT, little evidence of any change in repeat CT use and its associated factors.Objectives and ApproachThis study aimed to measure trend in repeat CT use and identify factors associated with repeat CT use in tertiary hospitals in Western Australia (WA).This study used WA linked administrative records from hospital morbidity, emergency department presentations, and picture archiving and communication system datasets to capture all tertiary hospitalisations and number of CT use during the admission from 2003 to 2015. Multivariate logistic regression was used to examine trend and determine characteristics associated with repeat CT, for admissions with and without major surgery during hospitalisation.ResultsAmong 303,439 admissions with CT scan 11.9% had repeat CT scan in the same anatomic areas. While the probability of repeat CT among admission with surgery remained unchanged over the study period, its counterpart significantly reduced about 4% per year. Regardless of surgical status, repeat CT scanning was significantly lower among females, Indigenous and older age groups but higher among people living in rural and remote areas. We found that admissions for circulatory conditions, injuries, cancer or multimorbidity had significantly higher probability of having repeat CT.Conclusion / ImplicationsThis study indicates that clinical factors such as cancer, injury and multimorbidity are factors contributing to repeat CT. A reduction of repeat CT over the study period among admissions without surgical procedure suggests a potential reduction of unnecessary CT scan, although further study is needed to fully capture whether this is an actual change in practice.

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