# Diagnostic Excellence, Imaging Stewardship, and Re-establishing the Value Proposition in Radiology: A Look Back and a Way Forward

**Authors:** Stephen Waite, Adrian Brady, Mark Graber, John D Banja, Brian Sheppard, Michael A Bruno

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.103537 · Cureus · 2026-02-13

## TL;DR

The paper discusses how imaging in radiology has shifted from being a precise diagnostic tool to a frequently overused practice, and suggests ways to restore its original value in medicine.

## Contribution

The paper provides a critical analysis of the evolving role of diagnostic imaging and proposes strategies to promote imaging stewardship and diagnostic excellence.

## Key findings

- Imaging is increasingly used without clear clinical hypotheses, leading to low-value tests.
- Psychological discomfort with uncertainty and medicolegal concerns drive overutilization.
- The original purpose of imaging as a targeted diagnostic tool is being overshadowed by broader expectations.

## Abstract

Historically, imaging was used to test specific clinical hypotheses and reduce diagnostic uncertainty by clarifying, narrowing, and prioritizing differential diagnoses. Advanced imaging, such as CT and MRI, was used judiciously owing to concerns about high costs and, in the case of CT scanning, the need to limit patients' exposure to ionizing radiation. But times have changed: the threshold for ordering imaging tests is now substantially lower, and as a result, a high - and growing - volume of low-value imaging is performed, often without any particular clinical or diagnostic hypothesis in mind. Several factors are contributing to this excess demand. Perhaps chief among them is a psychological discomfort with diagnostic uncertainty and a higher tolerance for low-value imaging. Other factors include perceived medicolegal risk and the widespread expectation that physicians exhaustively investigate all incidental findings. These factors are effectively changing the role of diagnostic imaging in ways that far exceed its original mandate of answering specific clinical questions. In this manuscript, we discuss these factors, review the value proposition of imaging, and attempt to place its use in the context of diagnostic excellence. We also discuss methods to curb increasing overutilization.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

104 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989167/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989167