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Background: Substantial overuse of health care services is identified and intensified efforts are incited to reduce low-value services in general and in imaging in particular.
Objective: To report crucial success factors for developing and implementing interventions to reduce specific low-value imaging examinations based on a case study in Norway.
Materials And Methods: Mixed methods design including one systematic review, one scoping review, implementation science, qualitative interviews, content analysis of stakeholders' input, and stakeholder deliberations.
Results: The description and analysis of an intervention to reduce low-value imaging in Norway identifies six general success factors: 1) Acknowledging complexity: advanced knowledge synthesis, competence of the context, and broad and strong stakeholder involvement is crucial to manage de-implementation complexity. 2) Clear consensus-based criteria for selecting low-value imaging procedures are key. 3) Having a clear target group is critical. 4) Stakeholder engagement is essential to ascertain intervention relevance and compliance. 5) Active and well-motivated intervention collaborators is imperative. 6) Paying close attention to the mechanisms of low-value imaging and the barriers to reduce it is decisive.
Conclusion: Reducing low-value imaging is crucial to increase the quality, safety, efficiency, and sustainability of the health services. Reducing low-value imaging is a complex task and paying attention to specific practical success factors is key.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1067/j.cpradiol.2024.08.007 | DOI Listing |
IEEE Nanotechnol Mater Devices Conf
October 2024
Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322 USA.
Extinction in thin polymer films containing nanoparticles is important to photovoltaics, sensors, and interconnects. Extinction measured in 1-millimeter-thin films containing plasmonic nanoparticles increased with nanoparticle density to levels higher than predicted. Yet, enhancement of extinction was not measured in <100-nanometer-thin films containing high-density plasmonic nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Urol
September 2025
Department of Radiology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Purpose Of Review: This review aims to highlight the often-overlooked environmental impact of medical imaging in urological practice, focusing on energy consumption, associated carbon emissions, and practical strategies for reducing the carbon footprint of imaging modalities.
Recent Findings: Medical imaging accounts for a significant proportion of a hospital's total energy use, with MRI, CT, and PET-CT being the most energy-intensive modalities. A recent life cycle assessment found that energy usage accounted for over half of a radiology department's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
J Natl Cancer Inst
August 2025
VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, WA, USA.
Background: Inappropriate imaging to stage low-risk prostate cancer is considered low-value care. Determining the effectiveness of a theory-based intervention, Prostate Cancer Imaging Stewardship (PCIS), to promote guideline-concordant imaging.
Methods: A stepped-wedge, cluster-randomized trial, PCIS, was conducted between March 2018 and March 2021 at ten Veterans Health Administration medical centers (VAMC) initially selected for prostate cancer volume, geographic diversity, and willingness to participate.
Ann Surg Oncol
July 2025
Division of Breast Surgery, Tisch Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Background: When a breast abnormality is palpated on a clinical breast exam in the setting of negative imaging (mammography and/or sonography), fine-needle aspiration (FNA) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) often is performed as part of the "triple test" to rule out malignancy. Because the negative predictive value (>97 %) of modern breast imaging is high, we hypothesized that additional evaluation with FNA and MRI adds little diagnostic value.
Methods: This study queried institutional databases to identify patients with negative breast imaging who underwent MRI or FNA for evaluation of a palpable breast abnormality on a clinical breast exam (2009-2023).
Br J Radiol
July 2025
Discipline of Medical Imaging Sciences, the University of Sydney, Camperdown, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Objectives: The diagnosis pathway for patients presenting in the emergency department with lower limb trauma injuries requires adequate medical imaging of the regions of interest. Due to concerns of concurrent injury or overlapping symptoms, X-rays of multiple lower extremity regions may be requested simultaneously. This paper explores the diagnostic yield of imaging multiple lower limb regions following trauma.
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