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Radiological reports: how can we highlight them and optimize their drafting?​

The drafting of the medical imaging examination report is an essential step in radiology. This document, which provides the patient with the results of their analyses, is also a means to communicate with other healthcare professionals. The quality of patient care depends on the proper transmission of radiological information.

A poorly written or incomplete report can therefore have serious consequences on the monitoring and treatment of a disease. Why is promoting radiological reporting so important? What are the best practices to improve the process of writing those reports?

The reasons for promoting radiological reporting

In addition to a specialist’s oral explanations, reading the radiological report provides a patient with detailed information on their illness. Patients therefore need to have both accurate and intelligible reports to fully understand their situation. A well-written radiology report thus promotes the patient’s involvement in their own care.

Clinicians also need reports that are both concise and comprehensive. Since they use the information available to them to make medical decisions, such as which treatment to adopt for the patient’s condition, the radiological report must be complete and not omit important information under any circumstances. Nevertheless, it must remain easy to break down and to read for medical staff. Furthermore, to be understandable and relevant, the report must both be of clinical relevance and use standardized terminology. The more the radiological report meets these criteria, the better the quality of care the patient will receive.

It is therefore important to promote the act of writing radiological reports, which play a crucial role in communication with the patient and other medical professionals, as well as in the treatment plan. Highlighting this act helps shed light on the crucial role played by radiologists, who identify anomalies and diagnose diseases, and thus make it a source of professional recognition and job satisfaction.

How can the writing of radiological reports be optimized?

Several technologies save time in writing radiology reports. This is particularly the case for speech recognition applications, which allow radiologists to dictate the content of reports instead of having to handwrite it. There are also digital writing support solutions, which offer report templates to be filled in and simplified formatting.

Writing synoptic reports, structured using templates developed for each type of medical imaging examination, is an excellent practice to reduce the risk of omission while saving radiologists valuable time. It is also recommended that radiologists collaborate with other clinicians to add additional information, reduce the risk of error, and make decisions in a more informed manner.

In addition, artificial intelligence can optimize the writing of radiological reports by analyzing images and then producing important information. AI can pre-write the report: the radiologist then needs only to check the information before sending it to the patient or other medical staff. It therefore relieves medical imaging professionals from repetitive tasks such as typing or formatting text by automating them.

Radiological reporting responds to major challenges, both for patients and for healthcare professionals. The quality of reporting and the quality of care are very closely linked. Promoting the act of reporting optimizes patient care, strengthens collaboration among medical staff, and increases the satisfaction of imaging professionals.