Pediatric Patient Fractures Skull While Under Care Of Radiology Technologist
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Case Overview
This case involves a 13-year-old girl who fractured her skull while undergoing an x-ray in a university hospital in California. The girl presented to the hospital with complaints of severe nausea and a physician determined that she needed an x-ray. In the x-ray room, a radiologic technologist asked the girl to stand against the radiology board so that they could complete the x-ray. The radiologic technologist left the room so that the x-ray could begin. Immediately upon leaving the room, the technologist heard something heavy hit the floor. The girl had fallen unconscious and fractured her skull upon hitting the floor. The girl required emergency brain surgery to remove the bleeding in her brain as a result of the fracture. An expert in protocols and procedures for radiology technologists was sought to review the case and comment on how pediatric patients with symptoms such as severe nausea should undergo imaging.
Questions to the Radiology expert and their responses
Please explain your experience caring for pediatric patients as a radiologic technologist.
I have cared for a wide range of patients, including pediatric patients, as part of my duties for almost 30 years. Regardless of the patient's age, each patient needs to be assessed as a fall risk before allowing them to stand unattended.
What factors should be considered by a radiologic technologist when determining if it is safe or not to leave a pediatric patient unattended in the imaging room?
This makes me wonder why the patient was brought over on a litter, as a stable patient without fall risks could walk or come by wheelchair. If the patient is a fall risk, the exam is done either seated, if the exam allows, or portable in the patient's room.
What protocols or safeguards, if any, exist to prevent a patient from falling in the imaging room?
There are straps on the table to prevent patients from rolling off and those same straps can be used to secure a patient when the table is upright. I would want to know why they were not used.
About the expert
This expert has over three decades of experience in radiologic technology. He received his AS in radiologic technology from Northampton Community College and his BS in health education and MA in education from Widener University. He is certified by the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists in radiography and magnetic resonance imaging and holds an additional certification from Johns Hopkins Hospital in advanced imaging technology. He has presented on many topics in radiologic technology nationally and has published seven peer-reviewed publications. Formerly, this expert was the owner of a private MRI safety consultancy and education company and senior manager of modality programs at Philips Healthcare. Currently, he is the MRI safety officer and director of education at a ferromagnetic manufacturing company in Pennsylvania.

E-263693
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