Study: Preponderance of Medical Imaging Due to Overutilization

[This article posted on August 31, 2010. It is posted within the following categories: Corporate, Healthcare Policy & The Media, Knowledge & Medicine, Science & Research, via Michael Douglas, MD, MBA.]

The massive increase in procedures over the past 20 years has added to the cost of providing care, to no one’s surprise. A study in the recent Radiology journal acknowledges this.

Part of the explosion in medical imaging over the past two decades may be attributable to overutilization, and steps need to be taken to cut back … Imaging services and their costs have grown at about twice the rate of other technologies in healthcare including lab procedures and pharmaceuticals…

Part of the problem fueling this growth has been the inclusion of many non-invasive standard imaging techniques as being procedure based — lumping the costs associated with uncomplicated, unenhanced CT imaging with, say, CT-guided renal biopsy — for example. Of course, bordering on the unethical side are the practices of self-referral within large imaging groups in many healthcare markets. | LINK

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