To the Editor: Two key paradigm shifts are occurring with regard to diagnostic imaging services in Australia that may have far-reaching medicolegal and professional consequences for all doctors, have an impact on patient care and, ironically, increase costs to the health budget.
The full article is accessible to AMA
members and paid subscribers.
Login to MJA or subscribe now.
- Department of Medical Imaging, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, QLD.
Correspondence: nibrown@tpg.com.au
- 1. Australian Government. Budget Paper No. 2. Part 2: expense measures. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia, 2009. http://www.aph.gov.au/budget/2009-10/content/bp2/html/bp2_expense-16.htm (accessed Mar 2011).
- 2. Donovan T, Manning DJ. Successful reporting by non-medical practitioners, such as radiographers, will always be task specific and limited in scope. Radiography 2006; 12: 7-12.
- 3. Hardy M, Culpan G. Accident and emergency radiography: a comparison of radiographer commenting and “red dotting”. Radiography 2007; 13: 65-71.
- 4. Halpin SFS. Medico-legal claims against English radiologists: 1995–2006. Br J Radiol 2009; 82: 982-988.
- 5. Levin D, Rao VM. The quality of interpretations of imaging studies by nonradiologist physicians — a patient safety issue? J Am Coll Radiol 2004; 1: 506-509.
Online responses are no longer available. Please refer to our instructions for authors page for more information.

