Breast screening: PERFORMS identifies key mammographic training needs
journal contribution
posted on 2007-02-05, 16:28authored byHazel J. Scott, Alastair Gale
The UK Breast Screening Programme has recently expanded the age range
for invitation in the prevalent round to 70 years. In contrast, fewer radiologists now
choose to specialise in the area of breast cancer screening. In response to this depletion
in film-reading personnel, an increasing number of radiographers have been trained as
advanced practitioners in order to film read alongside the current radiologists. As part
of the quality assurance programme for the National Health Service Breast Screening
Programme (NHSBSP), each film-reader can participate in a voluntary self-assessment
scheme (PERFORMS) which consists of a number of recent challenging breast screening
cases that are amassed nationally and distributed bi-annually. The scheme produces
anonymous data on any areas of difficulties that individual participants have; these
data can then be aggregated over groups of participants or over specific types of
screening cases. In this paper the areas of difficulty experienced by groups of advanced
practitioners and radiologists on the PERFORMS cases were investigated to determine
whether there were occupational group differences in reading skills in terms of case
classification and feature type. Identifying if such problematic areas exist would be the
first step to provide training sets specially tailored to the needs of particular
occupational groups. As a bench mark for which cases could be problematic, the types
of cases that a panel of experienced radiologists deemed as difficult was first examined
in order to compare the performance of both film-reading groups against this panel
standard. Secondly, any differences in performance error and case characteristics
(classification, difficulty level and feature type) between radiologists and advanced
practitioners were examined. The decisions of 15 experienced ‘panel’ radiologists and
approximately 400 film readers (including radiologists and advanced practitioners)
were compared on 180 cases, over a number of years. This study employed a matched
design which controlled for any differences between radiologists and advanced
practitioners in terms of real-life factors such as volume of cases read per week and
years of radiological experience. The results elucidate the type of cases most
appropriate for advanced mammographic training. No significant differences were
found between the advanced practitioners and radiologists on these self-assessment
screening cases indicating that dedicated occupational group training is not required.
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Citation
SCOTT and GALE, 2006. Breast screening: PERFORMS identifies key mammographic training needs. British Journal of Radiology, 79 (S2), S127-S133
This is Restricted Access. This article was published in the journal, British Journal of Radiology and is also available at: http://bjr.birjournals.org/.