And we're off! The RSNA annual meeting is approaching, and we've begun to post our Road to RSNA coverage of key research that will be presented in Chicago. Check out our first installment, a preview of AI. Then take a look at our second Road, which covers Women's Imaging. And keep your eyes peeled next week for more roundups, to be delivered daily.
When you're done perusing our first two Road sections, take a look at the most-read story of the past week: coverage in our CT content area of a 20-year international study showing that lung cancer screening boosts survival rates. Then navigate to our second most popular story, a report on the incidence of "moral injury" among interventional radiologists in our Practice Management content area.
Do patients have expectations when it comes to how clinicians dress? Apparently not, according to our third-most read article, posted in our Women's Imaging content area, which found that patients are indifferent to breast imagers' professional attire. Also in Women's Imaging, take a look at our coverage of how AI modeling detects and classifies breast microcalcifications and of an American Cancer Society report on the (surprising?) link between housing assistance and breast cancer screening uptake.
Finally, navigate to our Digital X-Ray content area to hear what Julianna Czum, MD, from Johns Hopkins University had to say about a study that found an AI algorithm successfully triaged pairs of chest radiographs that showed no changes -- while also detecting urgent interval changes during longitudinal follow-up.