A new role for imaging in the diagnosis of physical elder abuse: results of a qualitative study with radiologists and frontline providers.

TitleA new role for imaging in the diagnosis of physical elder abuse: results of a qualitative study with radiologists and frontline providers.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsLee M, Rosen T, Murphy K, Sagar P
JournalJ Elder Abuse Negl
Volume31
Issue2
Pagination163-180
Date Published2019 Mar-May
ISSN1540-4129
KeywordsAged, Clinical Competence, Communication, Education, Medical, Continuing, Elder Abuse, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, New England, Physical Abuse, Professional-Family Relations, Radiologists, Workflow
Abstract

Pediatric radiologists play a key role in the detection of child abuse through the identification of characteristic injury patterns. Emergency radiologists have the potential to play an equally important role in the detection of elder physical abuse; however, they currently play little to no part in this effort. We examine the reasons behind this limited role, and potential strategies to expand it, by interviewing attending faculty from Emergency Radiology, Geriatrics, Emergency Medicine, Pediatric Radiology, and Pediatrics. Our interviews revealed that radiologists' contribution to elder abuse detection is currently limited by gaps in training, gaps in knowledge about imaging correlates, and gaps in inter-team clinical communication. Specifically, radiographic interpretation of elder trauma is severely restricted by lack of communication between frontline providers and radiologists about patients' injury mechanism and functional status. Improving this communication and re-conceptualizing ED workflow is critical to expanding and optimizing radiologists' role in elder abuse detection.

DOI10.1080/08946566.2019.1573160
Alternate JournalJ Elder Abuse Negl
PubMed ID30741114
PubMed Central IDPMC6579604
Grant ListK76 AG054866 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
R03 AG048109 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States

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