The introduction of computed tomography (CT) has stimulated the interest of both the medical profession and the nonmedical public. Its importance to physicians in the evaluation of patients with brain disease was rapidly established: neurologists and neurosurgeons who had CT available soon found that their method of practice was markedly changed. As medical enthusiasm mounted, however, public resistance to this expensive new technology became apparent, particularly among those responsible for funding health care. (February 2, 1978)
New England Journal of Medicine
1978
Abrams HL and McNeil BJ
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM197802022980506