The problem is that just because you‘re detecting something, it does not mean it is worth watching. Bodies are not standardized and most people habe something off. But you can‘t really reschedule everybody constantly, as that would entirely break the concept.
cyberax|15 days ago
So if you have abnormal findings in 10% of patients that merit follow-up scans, you can trivially do a series of 3-4 scans without affecting the overall cost too much.
Doctors simply need to get out of the headspace where MRIs are extremely scarce tools of last resort and treat them like we treat blood tests.
jmward01|15 days ago
A lot of this however is how it is discussed with the patient. Discussions about the likelihood of there being a real issue when something is seen need to be clear and informative without being alarming. 'We did a routine scan and these often show transient artifacts that turn out to be nothing, but in an abundance of caution we want to do a followup' is totally different than 'we saw something we are concerned about and need to do a followup'. How things are messaged really matters.
lostlogin|15 days ago
How would this work?
I can do a blood test and send it to the lab to be processed in ~5 minutes from the moment I meet the patient. Consumable costs are about $2.
I can also do an MR scan. It took a fair bit of training and the scanner and scan room cost about US$2 million. Service contracts on the scanner, scan room, chillers and required staffing utterly dwarf the cost of the scanner over its lifetime.
The scan takes 20-75 minutes. Then the images get sent for reporting. Unlike a blood test, reporting isn’t automated. Even if it was, how could availability of MR ever be similar to a blood test?
tptacek|15 days ago
Treating MRIs the way we treat blood tests would almost certainly result in huge numbers of needless invasive procedures.