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Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement

Background : Feedback on Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) skills is essential for skill development. Providing feedback can be difficult in a large province with several distributed medical education sites. Use of handheld POCUS devices and a cloud-based image archiving enables virtual supervision....

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Autores principales: Murray, Sydney, Trinder, Krista, Kolbenson, Linden, Katulka, Jeremy, Olszynski, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: CINQUILL Medical Publishers Inc 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10155719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37152344
http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/pocus.v8i1.16195
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author Murray, Sydney
Trinder, Krista
Kolbenson, Linden
Katulka, Jeremy
Olszynski, Paul
author_facet Murray, Sydney
Trinder, Krista
Kolbenson, Linden
Katulka, Jeremy
Olszynski, Paul
author_sort Murray, Sydney
collection PubMed
description Background : Feedback on Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) skills is essential for skill development. Providing feedback can be difficult in a large province with several distributed medical education sites. Use of handheld POCUS devices and a cloud-based image archiving enables virtual supervision. We evaluated the quality of uploaded images as well as feedback provided to students. Methods: Volunteer third year students were given access to handheld POCUS devices at various training sites. Students were encouraged to upload educational POCUS scans to their accounts where they would then receive feedback from faculty. Subsequently, images that met inclusion criteria were randomized and reviewed by a blinded expert using a global rating scale. Feedback was also analyzed. Finally, students completed a questionnaire on their technology-enhanced POCUS learning experience. Results: An independent-sampled t-test comparing mean ratings for initial images submitted prior to any feedback with those submitted after three rounds of feedback showed significant effect on image scores (2.60 vs 3.50, p = .040, d = .93). Feedback included 4 performance domains (indications, image generation, interpretation, and integration). Students found the technology easy to use and felt feedback was tailored to their learning needs. Conclusions: We observed that virtual feedback provided to medical students through a cloud-based work platform can be effective for enhancing POCUS skills.
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spelling pubmed-101557192023-05-04 Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement Murray, Sydney Trinder, Krista Kolbenson, Linden Katulka, Jeremy Olszynski, Paul POCUS J Medicine Background : Feedback on Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) skills is essential for skill development. Providing feedback can be difficult in a large province with several distributed medical education sites. Use of handheld POCUS devices and a cloud-based image archiving enables virtual supervision. We evaluated the quality of uploaded images as well as feedback provided to students. Methods: Volunteer third year students were given access to handheld POCUS devices at various training sites. Students were encouraged to upload educational POCUS scans to their accounts where they would then receive feedback from faculty. Subsequently, images that met inclusion criteria were randomized and reviewed by a blinded expert using a global rating scale. Feedback was also analyzed. Finally, students completed a questionnaire on their technology-enhanced POCUS learning experience. Results: An independent-sampled t-test comparing mean ratings for initial images submitted prior to any feedback with those submitted after three rounds of feedback showed significant effect on image scores (2.60 vs 3.50, p = .040, d = .93). Feedback included 4 performance domains (indications, image generation, interpretation, and integration). Students found the technology easy to use and felt feedback was tailored to their learning needs. Conclusions: We observed that virtual feedback provided to medical students through a cloud-based work platform can be effective for enhancing POCUS skills. CINQUILL Medical Publishers Inc 2023-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10155719/ /pubmed/37152344 http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/pocus.v8i1.16195 Text en Copyright (c) 2023 Sydney Murray, Krista Trinder, Linden Kolbenson, Jeremy Katulka, Paul Olszynski https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Medicine
Murray, Sydney
Trinder, Krista
Kolbenson, Linden
Katulka, Jeremy
Olszynski, Paul
Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement
title Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement
title_full Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement
title_fullStr Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement
title_full_unstemmed Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement
title_short Virtual Supervision of Third Year Medical Students Using Handheld POCUS Devices and Cloud-based Image Archiving Provides Opportunity for Feedback and Skill Improvement
title_sort virtual supervision of third year medical students using handheld pocus devices and cloud-based image archiving provides opportunity for feedback and skill improvement
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10155719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37152344
http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/pocus.v8i1.16195
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