Re: Ultrasound--diagnosis or treatment?

From: Sue Davies (sue@aiu.edu.au)
Thu Feb 22 16:32:07 2001


Well put! Surely our responsibility as a diagnostic team is to the wellbeing of the patient. A team includes all those involved in caring for the patient, including those using their skills and experience to report as requested by the referrer. Engendering a close working relationship between the members of any team will bring about a better result, so without doubt, the simple expedient of discussion and exchange of knowledge between referrer and diagnostician would give the patient the best of all of our skill. Is it not our responsibility to offer our patients the best? Sue Davies Australian Institute of Ultrasound PO Box 434, Mermaid Beach, Qld, 4218 Phone: 07 55266655 Fax: 07 55266041

-----Original Message----- From: ultrasound@obgyn.net [mailto:ultrasound@obgyn.net]On Behalf Of Mary Scarboro Sent: Friday, 23 February 2001 5:14 AM To: Multiple recipients of list ULTRASOUND Subject: Re: Ultrasound--diagnosis or treatment?

Hummmm....Me thinks perhaps you have not experienced the joy of learning that your patient with the hemorrhagic corpus luteum has undergone an emergency oophorectomy or how about the ectopic that has been passed off as an interesting but non-significant finding of 'tubal ring'? Try to describe a human nose without using the word 'nose'. See how in the process of assessing and documenting anatomic and physiologic information we tip toe around political boundaries, worry about covering our buns and dismiss our patient as someone else's responsibility. Sad. Mary C. Scarboro

-----Original Message----- From: AKJENNINGS@aol.com <mailto:AKJENNINGS@aol.com> < AKJENNINGS@aol.com <mailto:AKJENNINGS@aol.com> > To: Multiple recipients of list ULTRASOUND < ultrasound@forum.obgyn.net <mailto:ultrasound@forum.obgyn.net> > Date: Wednesday, February 21, 2001 2:05 PM Subject: Re: Ultrasound--diagnosis or treatment? Ultrasound technologists should ONLY describe what they see when making a written report. For example, a report should say "Inhomogeneous, solid appearing mass seen without increased blood flow. The measurements are ..." instead of "Fibroid". We are not physicians, and we open ourselves up for liability when we over step our position. If the physician ask what we think, then I would tell the doctor what I think the diagnosis and follow up should be. I would not put it in writing. They are the doctors, and we are the technologists.

Anita Jennings RDMS




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