Emergency physician gender and head computed tomography orders for older adults who have fallen

Author:

Kraft Rhys1,Mercuri Mathew234,Clayton Natasha56,Worster Andrew27,Mercier Eric89,Emond Marcel89ORCID,Varner Catherine1011ORCID,McLeod Shelley L.1011,Eagles Debra1213,Stiell Ian1213,Barbic David1415ORCID,Morris Judy1617,Jeanmonod Rebecca18ORCID,Kagoma Yoan K.19,Shoamanesh Ashkan2,Engels Paul T.20,Sharma Sunjay21,Papaioannou Alexandra2,Parpia Sameer722,Buchanan Ian2,Ali Mariyam2,de Wit Kerstin257ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences Queen's University Kingston Ontario Canada

2. Department of Medicine McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

3. Department of Philosophy University of Johannesburg Auckland Park Gauteng South Africa

4. Dalla Lana School of Public Health University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Queen's University Kingston Ontario Canada

6. Emergency Department Hamilton Health Sciences Hamilton Ontario Canada

7. Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

8. Centre de Recherche du CHU de Québec Université Laval Québec Quebec Canada

9. VITAM–Centre de Recherche en Santé Durable Université Laval Québec Quebec Canada

10. Schwartz/Reisman Emergency Medicine Institute, Sinai Health Toronto Ontario Canada

11. Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Temerty Faculty of Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

12. Ottawa Hospital Research Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

13. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

14. Emergency Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

15. Centre for Health Evaluation Outcome Sciences St Paul's Hospital Vancouver British Columbia Canada

16. Department of Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine Université de Montréal Montreal Québec Canada

17. Department of Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine Université de Montréal Québec Québec Canada

18. Emergency Medicine St. Luke's University Health Network Bethlehem Pennsylvania USA

19. Department of Radiology McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

20. Department of Surgery McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

21. Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

22. Ontario Clinical Oncology Group McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractObjectivePhysicians vary in their computed tomography (CT) scan usage. It remains unclear how physician gender relates to clinical practice or patient outcomes. The aim of this study was to assess the association between physician gender and decision to order head CT scans for older emergency patients who had fallen.MethodsThis was a secondary analysis of a prospective observational cohort study conducted in 11 hospital emergency departments (EDs) in Canada and the United States. The primary study enrolled patients who were 65 years and older who presented to the ED after a fall. The analysis evaluated treating physician gender adjusted for multiple clinical variables. Primary analysis used a hierarchical logistic regression model to evaluate the association between treating physician gender and the patient receiving a head CT scan. Secondary analysis reported the adjusted odds ratio (OR) for diagnosing intracranial bleeding by physician gender.ResultsThere were 3663 patients and 256 physicians included in the primary analysis. In the adjusted analysis, women physicians were no more likely to order a head CT than men (OR 1.26, 95% confidence interval 0.98–1.61). In the secondary analysis of 2294 patients who received a head CT, physician gender was not associated with finding a clinically important intracranial bleed.ConclusionsThere was no significant association between physician gender and ordering head CT scans for older emergency patients who had fallen. For patients where CT scans were ordered, there was no significant relationship between physician gender and the diagnosis of clinically important intracranial bleeding.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Wiley

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