Missed fractures resulting from satisfaction of search effect

This study assessed whether subtle fractures are mised in multitrauma patients because other fractures are detected. Sixty-five simulated trauma patients were each depicted in series of radiographs that were assembled from radiographs of several actual patients. The radiographs were selected to look like they belonged to a single patient. Forty-six cases included a radiograph showing a subtle fracture (which we called the “target”). In one experimental condition, none of the other radiographs in the patient’s series contained a fracture. In a second experimental condition, a radiograph containing an additional fracture (called the “distracter”) was substituted for a radiograph that had no fracture in the first experimental condition. The accuracy of detecting the target fractures was significantly reduced for cases in which the distracter fracture was reported. Awareness of the nature of this type of miss may lead to realistic strategies to avoid it.

[1]  John A. Swets,et al.  Evaluation of diagnostic systems : methods from signal detection theory , 1982 .

[2]  R. Daffner,et al.  Patterns of high-speed impact injuries in motor vehicle occupants. , 1988, The Journal of trauma.

[3]  K. Berbaum,et al.  Satisfaction of search in diagnostic radiology. , 1989, Investigative radiology.

[4]  J. J. Geraghty,et al.  The Influence of Clinical History on Visual Search with Single and Multiple Abnormalities , 1993, Investigative radiology.

[5]  C. Nodine,et al.  Using eye movements to study visual search and to improve tumor detection. , 1987, Radiographics : a review publication of the Radiological Society of North America, Inc.

[6]  D. Chakraborty,et al.  Free-response methodology: alternate analysis and a new observer-performance experiment. , 1990, Radiology.

[7]  John A. Campbell Error and Variation in Diagnostic Radiology , 1968 .

[8]  B. J. Winer Statistical Principles in Experimental Design , 1992 .

[9]  S H Cornell,et al.  Time course of satisfaction of search. , 1991, Investigative radiology.

[10]  L F Rogers,et al.  Evaluating the multiply injured patient radiographically. , 1990, The Orthopedic clinics of North America.

[11]  W. R. Buckland,et al.  Distributions in Statistics: Continuous Multivariate Distributions , 1974 .

[12]  W. J. Tuddenham Visual search, image organization, and reader error in roentgen diagnosis. Studies of the psycho-physiology of roentgen image perception. , 1962, Radiology.