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Simplified Readability Metric Drives Improvement of Radiology Reports: an Experiment on Ultrasound Reports at a Pediatric Hospital

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Abstract

Highly complex medical documents, including ultrasound reports, are greatly mismatched with patient literacy levels. While improving radiology reports for readability is a longstanding concern, few articles objectively measure the effectiveness of physician training for readability improvement. We hypothesized that writing styles may be evaluated using an objective two-dimensional measure and writing training could improve the writing styles of radiologists. To test it, a simplified “grade vs. length” readability metric is developed based on results from factor analysis of ten readability metrics applied to more than 500,000 radiology reports. To test the short-term effectiveness of a writing workshop, we measured the writing style improvement before and after the training. Statistically significant writing style improvement occurred as a result of the training. Although the degree of improvement varied for different measures, it is evident that targeted training could provide potential benefits to improve readability due to our statistically significant results. The simplified grade vs. length metric enables future clinical decision support systems to quantitatively guide physicians to improve writing styles through writing workshops.

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Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Richard Hoyt and Megan Reynolds from Nationwide Children’s Hospital’s Research Information Solutions and Innovation (RISI) center for their assistance with retrieving data from Epic. We also thank Tran Bourgeois for using REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture) to set up user experiments, Katherine Strohm for project management, Dr. Jeffrey Hoffman for discussion of EPIC integration, and Dr. Michael Bruno from the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center at the Penn State College of Medicine for inspiring the study.

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Correspondence to Wei Chen.

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This study was supported by grant UL1TR001070 from the Center for Clinical and Translational Science at the Ohio State University to Dr. Brent Adler and MDSR Roessler Scholarship from the Ohio State University medical center to Claire Durkin.

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The author’s declare that they have no competing interests.

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Chen, W., Durkin, C., Huang, Y. et al. Simplified Readability Metric Drives Improvement of Radiology Reports: an Experiment on Ultrasound Reports at a Pediatric Hospital. J Digit Imaging 30, 710–717 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10278-017-9972-7

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10278-017-9972-7

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