Hypothesis: The majority of Emergency physicians and patients do not feel that specific informed consent should be obtained for ED CT scans. Secondary Hypothesis: Emergency attending physicians and residents will have similar attitudes about CT scan consent issues. Physician attitudes toward obtaining consent for CT scans will change after an educational program about the associated risks.
ED residents and ED attendings who attend grand rounds will be given a survey and asked to anonymously complete the first portion before grand rounds (Figure 1, example A). The first portion will assess basic demographics, CT ordering patterns and experiences, and attitudes about informed consent. They will be provided with an educational program at grand rounds that reviews current literature relevant to CT utilization and consent issues. After the lecture they will be asked to complete the second section of the survey (Figure 1, Example B). Both portions of the survey will be simultaneously returned in a sealed envelope and placed in a collection box at grand rounds. ED attendings who do not attend grand rounds will only be asked to complete the first portion of the survey (Figure 1, example A). Resident or attending consent to participate will not be coerced, and participation will be implied by completion of the survey.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
77
Physicians will have a brief education session provided in powerpoint about the risks of CT
Survey response to physician attitudes about ordering CT
Before and after education physicians will be surveyed as to the attitudes about ordering ct's
Time frame: 30 minutes (after lecture) resurvey
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