U.S. ranks number one in use of high-tech imaging
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The United States ranks highest in high-tech imaging use compared to other countries worldwide, while Germany and Singapore rank high in use of both high- and low-tech imaging, a new study showed.
The study compared use of radiography (low-tech imaging) to CT and MR (high-tech imaging) in 15 countries (United States, Canada, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, South Korea, China, India, Singapore, Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico) to determine how the worlds radiology resources were being used.
Germany, Singapore and South Korea had the highest per capita use for X-ray, with the lowest use in India, China and Indonesia, said Mark Schweitzer, MD, of the Hospital for Joint Diseases Orthopedic Institute in New York, and one of study authors. On the other hand, the United States had the highest per capita use of MR and CT, almost 10 times more than Singapore and Germany, which each ranked second in per capita use of high-tech imaging. The lowest MR usage was in India, China and Indonesia.
X-ray use per capita varied by a factor of three between less and more developed nations while MR and CT use varied by a factor of 100, Schweitzer said. When income was factored into the equation, some of the worlds poorest countries (India, China and Indonesia) had the highest use of X-rays relative to dollars of income. Not surprisingly, the most capital intensive countries more often used CT and MRI, he said.
France was an outlier among wealthier nations, he noted. The authors did not specifically research reasons for the global differences, but who is paying for the studies may be a driving force in image utilization, Schweitzer said. The study was based on 2001 data from multiple national and regional organizations, vendor data and data from the U.S. Department of Commerce and the World Bank.