While lots of Americans undergo CT scans (their use has tripled over the past 15 years), that research is unlikely to come up in doctors’ offices: Two-thirds of patients in a new JAMA study reported hearing nothing of the risks of the diagnostic procedure.
Meanwhile, 17 percent felt like they played an active role in a discussion over whether this diagnostic test was the best path forward.
Would a conversation about the potential risks have made a difference? Caverly’s team asked a few other questions that suggest it would: Patients undergoing the scan have little idea about the radiation involved. One-quarter self-identified radiation as a risk of a CT scan; 37 percent were able to identify CT scans as having a higher level of radiation than a chest x-ray.
Washington Post
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