Great work, Michael. Excessive repetitive tautology of observation, thought and idea was not observed in this talk. The passive voice was not overused. Discomfort was not experienced in the watching thereof. Recommend interval repeat attendance of this conference, by listening back after an appropriate delay, depending on relevant ancillary observations, as clinically indicated. After all, the national flower of the radiologist, is - the hedge. Our favourite confectionery is, of course, fudge.
I am working using a third language (other than English or my mother tongue) avoiding long reports as blooming radiologic jargon has always been a pain. This article on Radiographics was very liberating to me
I agree with all except the part where the report should be easily understandable to the patient. The report is directed to the referring physician not directly to the patient.
Thanks for the great presentation about an ever actual topic! You said that your PACS has a built-in function to flag patients or examination for an easier follow up.. Can you share the name of it or of third-party softwares that integrate into PACS? Best regards!
Thank you. I reserve such "wordiness" for complex cases that are not straightforward and will require some careful problem solving by the ordering/consulted teams, particulary if several teams will be invovled in coordinating diagnosis/treatment. In those cases I tend to set aside my desire for brevity and adopt a more conversational tone where I lay it all out there. I try not to assume that they will reach out with questions, because many providers do not.
Thanks a lot! I am board certified radiologist from Turkey and I have difficulties in Germany because they want to write everything in impressions part and when I don't do that, I got criticized and accused lack of experience and knowledge. Now I am more relieved to see I am not alone who writes something really necessary in other terms use simple and common language, I think I didn' t choose the right country :/ my skills and perceptions would be more suitable in USA...
The manuscript has several relevant citations, but many ideas are based on historical patterns in reporting, broader principles of clear communication, logic, common sense, and feedback. pubs.rsna.org/doi/10.1148/rg.2020200020
Great work, Michael. Excessive repetitive tautology of observation, thought and idea was not observed in this talk. The passive voice was not overused. Discomfort was not experienced in the watching thereof.
Recommend interval repeat attendance of this conference, by listening back after an appropriate delay, depending on relevant ancillary observations, as clinically indicated.
After all, the national flower of the radiologist, is - the hedge. Our favourite confectionery is, of course, fudge.
Great comments and good for a laugh - thanks!
So informative and intriguing. Thanks so much
Thanks a ton doc. Much needed.
Adapt, improvise, overcome! 🔥
Thank you very much for this video. Dr Jutinih Saliun. Radiologist
I am working using a third language (other than English or my mother tongue) avoiding long reports as blooming radiologic jargon has always been a pain. This article on Radiographics was very liberating to me
Great presentation! agree with everything.
Helpful conscise presentation.
Awesome content and presentation. Thank you sir for sharing.
Really helpful suggestions. Thank you!
Amazing presentation
I agree with all except the part where the report should be easily understandable to the patient. The report is directed to the referring physician not directly to the patient.
Can we write adenocarcinoma of colon as you mentioned in one of examples? Can we write histological diagnosis in our report?
And yes talk was awesome.
Thanks a lot
Thanks for the great presentation about an ever actual topic!
You said that your PACS has a built-in function to flag patients or examination for an easier follow up.. Can you share the name of it or of third-party softwares that integrate into PACS? Best regards!
Change/McKesson - Function is in Study Share -> Follow-up alerts
Very logical. Words to live by, although I thought the last few slides of impressions/recommendations were again getting wordy.
Thank you. I reserve such "wordiness" for complex cases that are not straightforward and will require some careful problem solving by the ordering/consulted teams, particulary if several teams will be invovled in coordinating diagnosis/treatment. In those cases I tend to set aside my desire for brevity and adopt a more conversational tone where I lay it all out there. I try not to assume that they will reach out with questions, because many providers do not.
Responsible reporting is key
Thanks a lot! I am board certified radiologist from Turkey and I have difficulties in Germany because they want to write everything in impressions part and when I don't do that, I got criticized and accused lack of experience and knowledge. Now I am more relieved to see I am not alone who writes something really necessary in other terms use simple and common language, I think I didn' t choose the right country :/ my skills and perceptions would be more suitable in USA...
Space Consultant Required Radiologist
Is this evidence based?
Logic and common sense based
The manuscript has several relevant citations, but many ideas are based on historical patterns in reporting, broader principles of clear communication, logic, common sense, and feedback.
pubs.rsna.org/doi/10.1148/rg.2020200020