Imaging accreditation with quality and ease: Part 1

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While vital for high-quality care, accreditation can be challenging and sometimes tedious for imaging departments. To help, this new article series will offer some tips for how to comply with the latest Intersocietal Accreditation Commission (IAC) Quality Improvement (QI) requirements with quality and ease.

Effective earlier this year, the IAC standardized its QI programs across all imaging modalities with the goal of addressing variations between the different modality divisions at IAC and to ease the burden of maintaining accreditation. Although some modalities such as echocardiography weren't changed much, others such as vascular testing experienced substantial modifications. The changes were adopted for all modalities except for nuclear medicine/PET.

IAC modality changes

In April, however, the IAC announced its proposed changes to the standards, including the addition of the standardized QI measures for nuclear medicine/PET and some minor changes to both adult and pediatric echocardiography. All proposed changes are open for comment until June 15.

4 key measures

Judith Buckland, president of CardioServ.Judith Buckland, president of CardioServ.

As a result of the standardization initiative, the IAC QI program now has four key measures for all modalities to follow:

  • Test appropriateness
  • Technical quality
  • Interpretive quality
  • Report completeness

As was the case before, modality divisions still retain the option to add a division-specific measure. In this article, we'll delve into the first two measures: test appropriateness and technical quality. Our next article will cover the remaining two measures.

Test appropriateness

Known to most under its previous name of Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC), this measure requires all modalities to assess the appropriateness of testing indications. The exception is pediatric echocardiography, as there are currently no published industry standards for assessing test appropriateness. In addition to renaming this measure from AUC to test appropriateness, the terminology of the appropriateness categories changed from appropriate, uncertain, and inappropriate to the following:

  • Appropriate/usually appropriate
  • May be appropriate
  • Rarely appropriate/usually not appropriate

Notably, this was a brand new measure for the vascular testing division as vascular QI had never required any kind of test appropriateness tracking until now. Although test appropriateness is now mandated across all imaging modalities, the specific number of cases to evaluate is modality-specific.

Since the new QI program became effective earlier this year, the IAC has also announced proposed changes to significantly reduce the number of required cases to be evaluated within the adult echo division. These proposed changes are still under review with no effective date yet announced, however.

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Summary of test appropriateness measure.

Technical quality

The second required across-the-board QI measure is technical quality. Most divisions already had some sort of required technical measure, but that was sometimes under a different name. This was also a brand new measure for the vascular division.

There are now three standardized features of the new technical quality measure, as well as an additional safety measure as applicable:

  • The clinical images for clarity of images and/or evaluation for suboptimal images or artifact
  • Completeness of the study
  • Adherence to the facility imaging acquisition protocols
  • Safety of imaging (MRI, CT, and proposed for nuclear)

All modality divisions now allow some kind of peer-review process to meet this standard and ensure image quality, completeness, and adherence to protocols. Over the course of this article series, we'll share lots of recommendations and tips on how to complete all of these measures with quality and ease.

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Summary of technical quality measure.

Stay tuned for our next article, which will review the other two new IAC key quality measures: interpretive quality and report completeness.

Judith Buckland is president of CardioServ, a consulting firm focused on inspiring excellence in diagnostic imaging. Judith can be reached by email at [email protected] or via CardioServ's website.

The comments and observations expressed do not necessarily reflect the opinions of AuntMinnie.com.

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