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Medical Practice

Human and Computer-aided Diagnosis of Abdominal Pain: Further Report with Emphasis on Performance of Clinicians

Br Med J 1974; 1 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.5904.376 (Published 02 March 1974) Cite this as: Br Med J 1974;1:376
  1. F. T. de Dombal,
  2. D. J. Leaper,
  3. Jane C. Horrocks,
  4. John R. Staniland,
  5. A. P. McCann

    Abstract

    This paper reports a controlled trial of human and computer-aided diagnosis in a series of 552 patients with acute abdominal pain. The overall diagnostic accuracy of the computer-aided system was 91·5% and that of the senior clinician to see each case was 81·2%. However, the clinician's diagnostic performance improved markedly during the period of the trial. The proportion of appendices which perforated before operation fell from 36% to 4% during the trial, and the negative laparotomy rate dropped sharply. After the trial closed in August 1972 these figures reverted towards their pretrial levels.

    It is suggested that while computer-aided diagnosis is a valuable direct adjunct to the clinician dealing with the “acute abdomen,” he may also benefit in the short-term from the constant feedback he receives and from the disciplines and constraints involved in communicating with the computer.