Your search
In authors or contributors
A multifaceted intervention to improve primary care radiology referral quality and value in Canterbury
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Holland, Kieran (Author)
- McGeoch, Graham (Author)
- Gullery, Carolyn (Author)
Title
A multifaceted intervention to improve primary care radiology referral quality and value in Canterbury
Abstract
AIMS: This article describes a seven-year multifaceted intervention leading to sustained improvement in primary care radiology referral quality and value in Canterbury, New Zealand, and discusses the transferability to other health systems.
METHODS: Access criteria were developed with input from general practitioners and hospital-based specialists, and embedded in locally developed clinical pathways. A referral management service was created to streamline referral processes. Systems were developed to enable electronic referral and triage, and to provide visibility of prior imaging. A team of general practitioners was formed to continually review referrals relative to agreed criteria and to provide advice to referrers. Referring general practitioners were provided data and education about their referral patterns relative to their peers. A clinical audit programme was introduced to ensure quality and safety of care.
RESULTS: The service achieved sustained improvements in referral quality (referral acceptance rates increased from 78% to 88%, urgent referrals reduced from 59% to 22%) and value (plain film volumes reduced by 40%).
CONCLUSIONS: Sustained improvement to primary care radiology referral quality and value is achievable at scale using a multifaceted intervention. The transferability of this outcome is likely to be connected to supporting factors present in the Canterbury health system.
Publication
The New Zealand Medical Journal
Date
Apr 28, 2017
Volume
130
Issue
1454
Pages
55-64
Journal Abbr
N. Z. Med. J.
ISSN
1175-8716
Language
en
Library Catalog
PubMed
Extra
PMID: 28449017
Link
Notes
Study topic: Evaluation of a seven-year multifaceted intervention to improve the quality and value of primary care radiology referrals in Canterbury, New Zealand.
Study type: Programme implementation and evaluation
Key findings:
- Key outcomes included a 10% increase in referral acceptance (from 78% to 88%), a 37% drop in urgent referrals, and a sustained 40% reduction in plain film imaging volumes.
- A seven-year intervention in Canterbury, New Zealand improved the quality and value of primary care radiology referrals through integrated clinical pathways, referral triage, and education.
- HealthPathways was used to disseminate access criteria and embed radiology guidelines into clinical workflows, promoting appropriate imaging use and supporting local service navigation.
- Resources saved from low-value imaging were reallocated to new community-based pathways (e.g., breast imaging, cognitive assessment), improving access and reducing hospital wait times.
- The Canterbury model relied on multifaceted referral management (education, audit, triage, and systems integration) and may be transferable to other services and settings when implemented with similar systemic support.
Citation
Holland, K., McGeoch, G., & Gullery, C. (2017). A multifaceted intervention to improve primary care radiology referral quality and value in Canterbury. The New Zealand Medical Journal, 130(1454), 55–64. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28449017/
Topic
Link to this record