Diagnostic Imaging Surge by Non-Radiologists Draws Concerns
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AT A GLANCE
* Private practice and imaging centers have significantly increased diagnostic imaging services compared to hospitals and
radiology departments.
*Cardiologists and orthopedic surgeons had the largest increases in imaging tests ordered from 1997 to 2002.
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Imaging experts say they are alarmed by the dramatic increase in the number of diagnostic imaging tests being performed by
physicians other than radiologists.
“These self-referrals, where physicians order imaging tests and then perform the tests themselves or have the tests performed
by members of their own medical group, represent the type of trend that will bankrupt the healthcare system by driving up
costs overall,” said David C. Levin, M.D., former chairman of the department of radiology at Thomas Jefferson University in
Philadelphia, and co-author of five papers presented today, Tuesday, November 30, 2004, at the annual meeting of the Radiological
Society of North America (RSNA).
“Plus, having physicians who are not specifically trained in imaging could result in a decrease in quality,” Dr. Levin added.
Other co-authors of the studies include Vijay Rao, M.D., chair of Radiology, Jefferson, Charles Intenzo, M.D., director of
the division of Nuclear Medicine, Jefferson, and Laurence Parker, Ph.D., research assistant professor of Radiology, Jefferson.
Dr. Levin and colleagues conducted their research by analyzing procedure, specialty and location codes drawn from the Medicare
Part B fee-for-services databases between 1997 and 2002. They found:
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Among radiologists, noninvasive diagnostic imaging utilization rates rose 11.6 percent; among all non-radiologists, utilization
rate increases were twice as high, at 23.5 percent; among cardiologists, those rates were twice again as high at 42.2 percent.
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Medicare reimbursement for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) services increased at six times the rate (599%) for orthopedic
surgeons than for radiologists (99%).
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The proportion of noninvasive diagnostic imaging performed in hospitals fell, with the in-patient percentage dropping from
33.6 percent to 28.4 percent, while imaging at private offices and imaging centers rose from 28.1 percent to 32.6 percent.
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The utilization rate of radionuclide myocardial perfusion imaging (RMPI), an exam of the heart that uses radioactive tracers
to diagnose coronary artery disease, rose 78 percent among cardiologists, compared with only 2 percent among radiologists.
Although the data cannot assess whether the individual tests ordered were needed, Dr. Levin said it is difficult to find any
clinical, technological or public health trends between 1997 and 2002 that could explain the marked disparity between the
increases in utilization rates by radiologists and non-radiologists.
“Other than being a way for the cardiologists and orthopedic surgeons to increase their revenues, there really is nothing
that can explain this increase of imaging services,” Dr. Levin said.
Dr. Levin recommended that healthcare payers take action to curb the trend, such as developing programs that allow only qualified
physicians to perform imaging exams, or conducting site inspections and accrediting only facilities that are qualified to
perform these imaging exams.
Dr. Levin is the national medical director of HealthHelp, a Houston-based radiology utilization management company. Other
co-authors of the studies are Andrea Maitino, M.S., and Jonathan Sunshine, Ph.D.
Media Only Contact:Jeffrey A. BaxtThomas Jefferson University Hospital
Phone: 215-955-6300
Published: 11-30-2004