Abstract

Abstract Introduction There is a correlation between adequate CT Trauma orders and accuracy of radiological reporting. In this audit, the aim is to improve accuracy of reporting by following the Royal College of Radiologists (RCR) indications for polytrauma CT imaging in the document ‘Standards of practice and guidance for trauma radiology in severely injured patients, 2nd edition’. Standard 7 in this guidance states that a CT request in the trauma setting should comply with the Ionising Radiation (Medical Exposure) Regulations justification regulations in the same way as any other request for imaging involving ionising radiation. Method Clinical information in CT orders of 57 major trauma patients in the East Midlands Major Trauma Centre were reviewed against ‘Standards of practice and guidance for trauma radiology in severely injured patients, 2nd edition’. The request should have two essential pieces of information: mechanism of injury and suspected injuries. In these 57 patient, 96% had appropriate requests. Since the target is 100%, an email was sent out and a teaching session was carried out to improve practice. A second cycle including 80 patients in the same centre was carried out. Results Before intervention, 96% of the CT in major trauma patients were compliant with guidelines. After intervention, this improved to 100%. Conclusion Compliance with RCR criteria improved after intervention, this surely helped avoid unnecessary radiation exposure and enhanced radiological reporting in major trauma patient scans.

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