As recommended by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Medical imaging procedures may be prescribed for patients, only when absolutely necessary. These imaging tests, if done correctly are relatively safe and offer accurate diagnosis that help referring physicians understand and treat health problems and disease.
When claims are reported, it is usually the hospital, free-standing clinic or private imaging laboratory that is legally responsible for the negligent acts of employed technologists or radiologists.
What is Imaging Laboratories / Medical Professional Liability?
Imaging laboratories and diagnostic centers carry professional liability insurance to protect against claims arising from alleged errors in patient care, misreads of scans, or procedural mistakes. Coverage focuses on negligence-based claims tied to interpretation, reporting, or imaging procedures rather than general property loss. Related commercial coverage such as commercial liability, equipment coverage, and property coverage can be layered for broader protection.
Who needs it
Typical buyers include hospital imaging departments, free‑standing diagnostic centers, outpatient clinics, and independent imaging labs. Radiologists, technologists, clinic managers and facility operators all face exposures from patient injury and interpretation errors. Smaller shops and large diagnostic centers alike should evaluate professional liability alongside commercial auto exposure and participant accident protections if transport or onsite procedures are offered.
What it typically covers
Professional liability for imaging labs commonly includes defense costs and settlements related to:
- Alleged misinterpretation of X‑rays, CTs, MRIs or ultrasounds
- Procedural errors by technologists or staff
- Failure to follow documented protocols or informed consent issues
For a broader program that addresses facility responsibilities and business risks, see the Medical Imaging Insurance Overview and consider combining policies that address equipment and property risks.
Common exclusions or limitations
Policies often exclude intentionally harmful acts, certain regulatory fines, contractual liabilities beyond professional negligence, and some cyber or privacy breaches unless explicitly added. Underwriting factors and prior claims history can also shape limits and exclusions.
Factors that influence cost
Premiums are influenced by claims history, the mix of services offered (interventional procedures vs. diagnostic reads), staff credentials, risk management programs, and patient volumes. Facilities that maintain documented protocols, ongoing staff training, and incident reporting systems typically receive more favorable underwriting treatment.
Proof of insurance & compliance
Hospitals and referral partners commonly request certificates of insurance and proof of limits and endorsements. Imaging centers often supply a certificate showing professional liability limits and additional insured or waiver of subrogation endorsements when contractually required. For program specifics relevant to diagnostic labs, review resources like Medical Diagnostic Centers Insurance and Professional Liability Insurance for Diagnostic Labs.
How to get a quote
Gather basic information on services provided, staff credentials, annual patient volumes and any prior claims. Discuss your operations and risk controls with an insurance professional; you can also ask your agent for tailored options and bundling opportunities that may include equipment and property coverage.
Risk scenario example: a misread MRI that delays diagnosis can trigger a defended claim — strong documentation and peer review procedures help reduce this exposure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do imaging labs need separate professional and general liability policies?
Yes. Professional liability covers errors in clinical services and interpretations, while general liability addresses third‑party bodily injury and property damage at the facility.
Will a single mistake always become a claim?
No. Not all incidents lead to claims, but even suspected errors can generate investigations and defense costs, which is why coverage is important.
Can technologists be named in claims against a facility?
Yes. Employed technologists and radiologists may be included in claims; often the employer is named as responsible for staff actions.
Still have questions? Talk to a local insurance expert.