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CT scans are becoming increasingly prevalent in medicine. These are reviewed by radiologists and formal report provided. A recent survey suggests that non-radiologists are increasingly being expected to be able to interpret pathology on CT scans, however there is limited training provided in medical school and specialty training schemes.
This study aims to qualitatively analyse how non-radiologists of different seniority and specialties approach CT body scan interpretation. This will be done by recording participants as they look at a pre-selected CT scan.
The data will be reviewed with a thematic analysis. The eventual aim is to develop a CT interpretation system, which can be used by the non-radiologist to look for important pathology on a CT scan of the body
Full description
A recent survey published in a local conference (Master 2023) asked 100 junior doctors across 16 Trusts in the UK (including ELHT and MFT) about their experience of CT. This showed that confidence in CT requesting and interpretation is very limited. From the same survey it seems that CT is very superficially taught in medical schools with no system given for interpretation. 90% of those surveyed said they would benefit from more educational resources in CT. The investigators hope to develop a CT interpretation resource to help the non-radiologist when looking at CT scans. This study aims to see how non-radiologists currently approach a CT scan to gain understanding of the needs of the new resources.
There is no similar study in the literature investigating how the non-radiologist approaches CT scans. There has been investigation of foundation doctors experience in radiology, however the focus was on plain xrays, not CT interpretation.
The investigators plan to use a thematic analysis in data interpretation. Rationale for using Thematic analysis.
Process of thematic analysis . Using the 6-step approach. Step Aims Comments
Data familiarisation Studying the transcripts & video with notes on initial impressions.
Initial codes derived Grouping data in a meaningful and systematic way.
Search for themes Discerning any significant pattern in the data.
Review themes Review the support for each theme and if they cover the entire data set.
Define themes Clear description of each theme covering the points it is addressing, any sub-themes it contains and how they relate to one-another.
Write-up Report on the key points, from this study, which are influencing CT scan interpretation and how it could be taught.
The reason being the researcher's need for first-hand familiarisation with a novel dataset. Once this preliminary phase has been carried out consideration will be given to using UCLan's access to Nvivo. This decision will take into account personal preferences, experiences with the preliminary data and the anticipated size of the data base.
• Once preliminary themes have been proposed a review will be made to see which codes they address. Unlinked codes will prompt further analysis of the themes, considered of new themes or development of sub-themes. This iterative process continues with new data until a steady state is achieved and no new themes are being generated.
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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Joshua J Lauder, MBChB FRCR
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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