TEST-ORDERING BY MULTIPLE PHYSICIANS INCREASES UNNECESSARY LABORATORY EXAMINATIONS

  • 1 March 1988
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 112 (3), 238-241
Abstract
In modern teaching hospitals, patients typically receive direct care from a succession of different physicians, each of whom may order diagnostic tests on the same patient. We examined the association of test-ordering by multiple physicians with unnecessary duplication of 20-test chemistry profiles in 198 consecutively admitted patients. In a multivariable regression model, the number of duplicate chemistry proofiles ordered for a patient was significantly correlated with the number of physicians ordering profiles after controlling for the overall intensity of profile testing. In a case-control analysis comparing duplicate with nonduplicate profiles, redundant tests were significantly more likely to have been ordered by a new physican who had not ordered a patient''s previous profile than by the same physician who had ordered the previous chemistry panel. We conclude that test ordering by multiple physicians, the prevalent pattern in almost all teaching hospitals, predisposes to unnecessary laboratory examinations.