Elsayes, Khaled M Marks, Robert M Kamel, Serageldin Towbin, Alexander J Kielar, Ania Z Patel, Parth Chernyak, Victoria Fowler, Kathryn J Nassar, Sameh Soliman, Moataz A
...
Published in
Academic radiology
The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has drastically disrupted radiology in-person education. The purpose of this study was to assess the implementation of a virtual teaching method using available technology and its role in the continuity of education of practicing radiologists and trainees during the pandemic. The authors created the Online Liver Imaging Cour...
Levy, Frank Rosen, Max P
Published in
Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR
During the first decade of the 21st century, the imaging bubble began to burst. The combination of digitized images, the DICOM standard, and affordable PACS sharply increased radiologists' productivity but also allowed an imaging study to be read from anywhere, creating the field of teleradiology and increased competition for radiologists. Increasi...
Levy, Frank Rosen, Max P
Published in
Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR
With the collapse of the Clinton health care reforms, advanced imaging entered an economic bubble. Between 1995 and 2006, the number of CT and MRI studies almost tripled, from 21 million to 62 million and from 9.1 to 26.6 million, respectively. The increase reflected increases in both the number of scanners and the number of scans generated per CT ...
Gemici, Aysegul Akdogan Bayram, Ersoy Hocaoglu, Elif Inci, Ercan
Published in
Acta Radiologica Open
Background Breast density is an important variable that can change the sensitivity of mammography. It can be analyzed with using the 4th and 5th editions of the Breast Imaging and Reporting Data System (BI-RADS) recommendations from the American College of Radiology (ACR). Purpose To define the intra- and inter-reader agreement levels of breast den...
Wang, Jiaxin Zhu, Yanli Song, Yuntao Xu, Guohui Yu, Hao Wang, Tianxiao Zhang, Bin
Published in
Gland surgery
Ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) cytology is a crucial diagnostic technique used to assess thyroid nodules. In the past, ultrasound-guided FNA was performed mainly by radiologists. However, many surgeons are increasingly being trained for this procedure now. In this study, we aimed to compare the adequacy and efficiency of ultrasound-...
Osiemo, Sarah K. Onyambu, Callen K. Aywak, Angeline A.
Published in
SA Journal of Radiology
Background Emergencies in the radiology department may arise in critically ill patients who are brought to the department for imaging, interventional procedures or as a result of adverse reactions to contrast media used for imaging. Adverse reactions to contrast media range from minor to severe life-threatening effects and initial, prompt managemen...
Levy, Frank Rosen, Max P.
The advent of the CT scanner in the early 1970s removed much, if not all, of the morbidity and discomfort previously associated with diagnostic imaging studies. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, advances in CT technology allowed radiologists to scan "better and faster." The professional fee for reading a CT study was higher than for reading a radiogr...
Levy, Frank Rosen, Max P.
During the first decade of the 21st century, the imaging bubble began to burst. The combination of digitized images, the DICOM standard, and affordable PACS sharply increased radiologists' productivity but also allowed an imaging study to be read from anywhere, creating the field of teleradiology and increased competition for radiologists. Increasi...
Levy, Frank Rosen, Max P.
In this four-part work, the authors review the economic history of how radiologists are paid, from the fight for independent billing in the 1960s to the impact of advanced imaging technologies on radiologists' incomes in the 1980s to the "bubble years" of the 1990s and to the end of the bubble in the first decade of the 21 century. The authors begi...
Levy, Frank Rosen, Max P.
With the collapse of the Clinton health care reforms, advanced imaging entered an economic bubble. Between 1995 and 2006, the number of CT and MRI studies almost tripled, from 21 million to 62 million and from 9.1 to 26.6 million, respectively. The increase reflected increases in both the number of scanners and the number of scans generated per CT ...