Optimizing Outpatient Oral Contrast Use in Abdominal CT–A Radiology Pandemic Response Initiative to Reduce Patient Time in the Waiting Room and Reduce Costs, While Improving Patient Experience

Author:

Renton Mary1,Kielar Ania Z.1,Toubassy Daniel1,May Mary1,Maganti Manjula2,Burton Corwin1,Krishna Satheesh1

Affiliation:

1. The Joint Department of Medical Imaging, University Hospital Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

2. Department of Biostatistics, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada

Abstract

Purpose: The aim was to reduce outpatient wait time and improve patient experience by optimising oral contrast use . Methods: Our multidisciplinary stakeholder collaboration implemented two simultaneous interventions: (1) Creation of ‘oral contrast policy’, limiting recommended indications. (2) Creation of a new shorter oral contrast regime (30 vs 60 min). We conducted a retrospective service evaluation of oral contrast use in outpatient (OP) abdominal CT at baseline and post-intervention. Patient wait times were measured and per-patient cost-savings were reported. An image quality review was performed by 2 blinded abdominal radiologists. Patient experience was evaluated with a standard voluntary survey. Statistical analysis was performed comparing baseline and evaluation outcomes using Chi-square or Fisher Exact test for categorical variables and Student’s t-test or ANOVA for continuous data. Results: Over 1-month periods, OP CT scans were assessed in baseline (pre-pandemic) n = 575, baseline (pandemic) n = 495 and post-intervention n = 545 groups. Oral contrast use reduced from 420/575, 73.0% at baseline to 178/545, 32.7% post intervention. The turn-around time reduced by 15.8 minutes per patient from 70.3 to 54.5 minutes, P < .001 (Interventions 1 and 2). The diagnostic quality did not differ between the oral contrast regimes (Intervention 2, P = 1.0, P = .08). No repeat CTs were needed due to lack of oral contrast (Intervention 1) or poor opacification (Intervention 2). There was oral contrast cost reductions of 69.1–78.4% ( P < .001). Patients reported their overall experience was improved post-intervention (Interventions 1 and 2). Conclusions: Optimising the CT oral contrast service through judicious use and a shorter regime, reduced patient wait times, improved patient experience and preserved diagnostic quality.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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