A New Pathway for Scaphoid Fractures: Cutting Wait Times with Cone Beam CT
A before-and-after study published in the Emergency Medicine Journal demonstrates a significant improvement in the diagnosis of suspected scaphoid fractures. Researchers implemented an ambulatory pathway in the Emergency Department where emergency clinicians could directly request outpatient cone beam CT (CBCT) scans. This intervention dramatically increased the proportion of patients receiving a definitive CBCT scan within seven days, from 11.1% to 91.8%. The new protocol also led to a 71.9% reduction in unnecessary fracture clinic attendances, streamlining patient flow and expediting access to appropriate care.
Why it might matter to you: This study provides a practical, evidence-based model for optimizing acute care pathways for common but diagnostically challenging injuries like scaphoid fractures. For emergency physicians, it highlights a strategy to reduce diagnostic delays, minimize complications from missed fractures, and improve departmental efficiency by reducing specialist referrals. Implementing similar point-of-care imaging protocols could enhance triage accuracy and patient outcomes in time-sensitive orthopedic emergencies.
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