Cargando…

Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study

BACKGROUND: The case triage practice workflow model was used to manage incoming cases on a telepathology-enabled surgical pathology quality assurance (QA) service. Maximizing efficiency of workflow and the use of pathologist time requires detailed information on factors that influence telepathologis...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Braunhut, Beth L., Graham, Anna R., Lian, Fangru, Webster, Phyllis D., Krupinski, Elizabeth A., Bhattacharyya, Achyut K., Weinstein, Ronald S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4060405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25057432
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/2153-3539.133142
_version_ 1782321368217419776
author Braunhut, Beth L.
Graham, Anna R.
Lian, Fangru
Webster, Phyllis D.
Krupinski, Elizabeth A.
Bhattacharyya, Achyut K.
Weinstein, Ronald S.
author_facet Braunhut, Beth L.
Graham, Anna R.
Lian, Fangru
Webster, Phyllis D.
Krupinski, Elizabeth A.
Bhattacharyya, Achyut K.
Weinstein, Ronald S.
author_sort Braunhut, Beth L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The case triage practice workflow model was used to manage incoming cases on a telepathology-enabled surgical pathology quality assurance (QA) service. Maximizing efficiency of workflow and the use of pathologist time requires detailed information on factors that influence telepathologists’ decision-making on a surgical pathology QA service, which was gathered and analyzed in this study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Surgical pathology report reviews and telepathology service logs were audited, for 1862 consecutive telepathology QA cases accrued from a single Arizona rural hospital over a 51 month period. Ten university faculty telepathologists served as the case readers. Each telepathologist had an area of subspecialty surgical pathology expertise (i.e. gastrointestinal pathology, dermatopathology, etc.) but functioned largely as a general surgical pathologist while on this telepathology-enabled QA service. They handled all incoming cases during their individual 1-h telepathology sessions, regardless of the nature of the organ systems represented in the real-time incoming stream of outside surgical pathology cases. RESULTS: The 10 participating telepathologists’ postAmerican Board of pathology examination experience ranged from 3 to 36 years. This is a surrogate for age. About 91% of incoming cases were immediately signed out regardless of the subspecialty surgical pathologists’ area of surgical pathology expertise. One hundred and seventy cases (9.13%) were deferred. Case concurrence rates with the provisional surgical pathology diagnosis of the referring pathologist, for incoming cases, averaged 94.3%, but ranged from 88.46% to 100% for individual telepathologists. Telepathology case deferral rates, for second opinions or immunohistochemistry, ranged from 4.79% to 21.26%. Differences in concordance rates and deferral rates among telepathologists, for incoming cases, were significant but did not correlate with years of experience as a practicing pathologist. Coincidental overlaps of the area of subspecialty surgical pathology expertise with organ-related incoming cases did not influence decisions by the telepathologists to either defer those cases or to agree or disagree with the referring pathologist's provisional diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS: Subspecialty surgical pathologists effectively served as general surgical pathologists on a telepathology-based surgical pathology QA service. Concurrence rates with incoming surgical pathology report diagnoses, and case deferral rates, varied significantly among the 10 on-service telepathologists. We found no evidence that the higher deferral rates correlated with improving the accuracy or quality of the surgical pathology reports.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4060405
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-40604052014-07-23 Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study Braunhut, Beth L. Graham, Anna R. Lian, Fangru Webster, Phyllis D. Krupinski, Elizabeth A. Bhattacharyya, Achyut K. Weinstein, Ronald S. J Pathol Inform Original Article BACKGROUND: The case triage practice workflow model was used to manage incoming cases on a telepathology-enabled surgical pathology quality assurance (QA) service. Maximizing efficiency of workflow and the use of pathologist time requires detailed information on factors that influence telepathologists’ decision-making on a surgical pathology QA service, which was gathered and analyzed in this study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Surgical pathology report reviews and telepathology service logs were audited, for 1862 consecutive telepathology QA cases accrued from a single Arizona rural hospital over a 51 month period. Ten university faculty telepathologists served as the case readers. Each telepathologist had an area of subspecialty surgical pathology expertise (i.e. gastrointestinal pathology, dermatopathology, etc.) but functioned largely as a general surgical pathologist while on this telepathology-enabled QA service. They handled all incoming cases during their individual 1-h telepathology sessions, regardless of the nature of the organ systems represented in the real-time incoming stream of outside surgical pathology cases. RESULTS: The 10 participating telepathologists’ postAmerican Board of pathology examination experience ranged from 3 to 36 years. This is a surrogate for age. About 91% of incoming cases were immediately signed out regardless of the subspecialty surgical pathologists’ area of surgical pathology expertise. One hundred and seventy cases (9.13%) were deferred. Case concurrence rates with the provisional surgical pathology diagnosis of the referring pathologist, for incoming cases, averaged 94.3%, but ranged from 88.46% to 100% for individual telepathologists. Telepathology case deferral rates, for second opinions or immunohistochemistry, ranged from 4.79% to 21.26%. Differences in concordance rates and deferral rates among telepathologists, for incoming cases, were significant but did not correlate with years of experience as a practicing pathologist. Coincidental overlaps of the area of subspecialty surgical pathology expertise with organ-related incoming cases did not influence decisions by the telepathologists to either defer those cases or to agree or disagree with the referring pathologist's provisional diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS: Subspecialty surgical pathologists effectively served as general surgical pathologists on a telepathology-based surgical pathology QA service. Concurrence rates with incoming surgical pathology report diagnoses, and case deferral rates, varied significantly among the 10 on-service telepathologists. We found no evidence that the higher deferral rates correlated with improving the accuracy or quality of the surgical pathology reports. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2014-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4060405/ /pubmed/25057432 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/2153-3539.133142 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Braunhut BL http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Braunhut, Beth L.
Graham, Anna R.
Lian, Fangru
Webster, Phyllis D.
Krupinski, Elizabeth A.
Bhattacharyya, Achyut K.
Weinstein, Ronald S.
Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study
title Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study
title_full Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study
title_fullStr Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study
title_full_unstemmed Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study
title_short Subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: A human factors study
title_sort subspecialty surgical pathologist's performances as triage pathologists on a telepathology-enabled quality assurance surgical pathology service: a human factors study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4060405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25057432
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/2153-3539.133142
work_keys_str_mv AT braunhutbethl subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy
AT grahamannar subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy
AT lianfangru subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy
AT websterphyllisd subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy
AT krupinskielizabetha subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy
AT bhattacharyyaachyutk subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy
AT weinsteinronalds subspecialtysurgicalpathologistsperformancesastriagepathologistsonatelepathologyenabledqualityassurancesurgicalpathologyserviceahumanfactorsstudy