How physicians use laboratory tests
L. P. Skendzel
The aim of our study was to measure the ways in which a physician perceives
and reacts to a laboratory result. After reviewing a series of brief
clinical problems, physicians were asked to indicate the change in test
results that would alter the diagnosis or treatment. Although there were
wide differences in attitudes, the pattern of responses from 125 internists
offered estimates of what is a clinically important change. In selected
clinical settings, the change in successive measurements chosen with the
greatest frequency as indicators of a clinically important change in level
were glucose, 35 mg/dl; BUN, 6 mg/dl; serum sodium, 4 to 6 mEq/liter; serum
potassium, 4 to 6 mEq/liter; uric acid, 8 mg/dl; creatinine, 0.4 mg/dl;
serum calcium, 4 to 5 mg/dl; triglycerides, 20 mg/dl; hemoglobin, 1 g/dl;
and serum osmolality, 11 mOsm/kg. The responses were compared with
estimates of laboratory precision drawn from a national quality control
program. The quality of laboratory testing was rated as satisfactory for
clinical use in four of five clinical settings. The study points out the
need to correlate the activities in the clinical laboratory with the
application of test results in the care of patients.