[Imaging center - optimization of the imaging process]

Rofo. 2013 Apr;185(4):313-9. doi: 10.1055/s-0032-1330346. Epub 2013 Jan 11.
[Article in German]

Abstract

Hospitals around the world are under increasing pressure to optimize the economic efficiency of treatment processes. Imaging is responsible for a great part of the success but also of the costs of treatment. In routine work an excessive supply of imaging methods leads to an "as well as" strategy up to the limit of the capacity without critical reflection. Exams that have no predictable influence on the clinical outcome are an unjustified burden for the patient. They are useless and threaten the financial situation and existence of the hospital. In recent years the focus of process optimization was exclusively on the quality and efficiency of performed single examinations. In the future critical discussion of the effectiveness of single exams in relation to the clinical outcome will be more important. Unnecessary exams can be avoided, only if in addition to the optimization of single exams (efficiency) there is an optimization strategy for the total imaging process (efficiency and effectiveness). This requires a new definition of processes (Imaging Pathway), new structures for organization (Imaging Center) and a new kind of thinking on the part of the medical staff. Motivation has to be changed from gratification of performed exams to gratification of process quality (medical quality, service quality, economics), including the avoidance of additional (unnecessary) exams.

MeSH terms

  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Critical Pathways / economics
  • Diagnosis-Related Groups / economics*
  • Diagnostic Imaging / economics*
  • Efficiency
  • Germany
  • Humans
  • National Health Programs / economics*
  • Outcome Assessment, Health Care / economics
  • Unnecessary Procedures / economics