X-Ray Description: Past, Present, Future

Authors

  • Ibragimova Iroda Vakhidovna assistant of the department of medical radiology, ASMI
  • Parpieva Dilfura Abdumalikovna candidate of medical sciences, PhD 2nd department of obstetrics and gynecology, ASMI

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62480/tjms.2024.vol29.pp101-102

Keywords:

radiology, structured protocols, radiographic protocol, standardized terminology

Abstract

The wide variety of description protocol styles that currently exist in radiology diagnostics is proof that a basic, universal description format has not been found, and there is no uniform standard for describing studies. All this allows us to formulate the main goals and objectives that must be overcome to improve and create a new form of radiological description protocols - protocols of the future.

References

Hickey P. The interpretation of radiographs. J. Mich. Med. Soc. 2014; 3:496.

Wallis A., McCoubrie P. The radiology report: are we getting the message across? Clin. Radiol. 2011; 66 (11): 1015–22.

Enfield C. The scope of the roentgenologist’s report. JAMA. 2013; 80:999.

Kahn C.E., Langlotz C.P., Burnside E.S. et al. Toward best practices in radiology reporting. Radiology. 2019; 252(3):852–6.

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Published

2024-02-28

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

X-Ray Description: Past, Present, Future. (2024). Texas Journal of Medical Science, 29, 101-102. https://doi.org/10.62480/tjms.2024.vol29.pp101-102