Awareness of medical radiation exposure among patients: A patient survey as a first step for effective communication of ionizing radiation risks.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The European Directive 2013/59/EURATOM requires patient radiation dose
information to be included in the medical report of radiological procedures. To provide
effective communication to the patient, it is necessary to first assess the patient's
level of knowledge regarding medical exposure. The goal of this work is to survey
patients' current knowledge level of both medical exposure to ionizing radiation and
professional disciplines and communication means used by patients to garner information.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: A questionnaire was designed comprised of thirteen questions:
737 patients participated in the survey. The data were analysed based on population
age, education, and number of radiological procedures received in the three years
prior to survey. RESULTS: A majority of respondents (56.4%) did not know which modality
uses ionizing radiation. 74.7% had never discussed with healthcare professionals the
risk concerning their medical radiological procedures. 70.1% were not aware of the
professionals that have expertise to discuss the use of ionizing radiation for medical
purposes, and 84.7% believe it is important to have the radiation dose information
stated in the medical report. CONCLUSION: Patients agree with new regulations that
it is important to know the radiation level related to the medical exposure, but there
is little awareness in terms of which modalities use X-Rays and the professionals
and channels that can help them to better understand the exposure information. To
plan effective communication, it is essential to devise methods and adequate resources
for key professionals (medical physicists, radiologists, referring physicians) to
convey correct and effective information.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15847Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.ejmp.2017.10.014Publication Info
Ria, Francesco; Bergantin, A; Vai, A; Bonfanti, P; Martinotti, AS; Redaelli, I; ...
Samei, Ehsan (2017). Awareness of medical radiation exposure among patients: A patient survey as a first
step for effective communication of ionizing radiation risks. Phys Med, 43. pp. 57-62. 10.1016/j.ejmp.2017.10.014. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15847.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Francesco Ria
Assistant Professor in the Department of Radiology
Dr. Francesco Ria is a medical physicist and he serves as an Assistant Professor in
the Department of Radiology. Francesco has an extensive expertise in the assessment
of procedure performances in radiology. In particular, his research activities focus
on the simultaneous evaluation of radiation dose and image quality in vivo in computed
tomography providing a comprehensive evaluation of radiological exams. Moreover, Francesco
is developing and investigating novel mathematical models t
Ehsan Samei
Reed and Martha Rice Distinguished Professor of Radiology
Dr. Ehsan Samei, PhD, DABR, FAAPM, FSPIE, FAIMBE, FIOMP, FACR is a Persian-American
medical physicist. He is a tenured Professor of Radiology, Medical Physics, Biomedical
Engineering, Physics, and Electrical and Computer Engineering at Duke University,
where he also serves as the Chief Imaging Physicist for Duke University Health System,
the director of the Carl E Ravin Advanced Imaging Laboratories, and the director of
Center for Virtual Imaging Trials. He is certi
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