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Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students

INTRODUCTION: Evidence supports an ultrasound-guided approach in patients with difficult vascular access. Prior research on teaching ultrasound-guided intravenous access has included only small groups of first- and second-year medical students. METHODS: We enrolled fourth-year medical students in ou...

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Autores principales: Adrian, Robert James, Choi, April, Lamba, Sangeeta, Ostrovsky, Ilya, Ramdin, Christine, Traba, Christin, Chen, Sophia, Sudyn, Alexander, Alerhand, Stephen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Association of American Medical Colleges 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8807663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35136837
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11222
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author Adrian, Robert James
Choi, April
Lamba, Sangeeta
Ostrovsky, Ilya
Ramdin, Christine
Traba, Christin
Chen, Sophia
Sudyn, Alexander
Alerhand, Stephen
author_facet Adrian, Robert James
Choi, April
Lamba, Sangeeta
Ostrovsky, Ilya
Ramdin, Christine
Traba, Christin
Chen, Sophia
Sudyn, Alexander
Alerhand, Stephen
author_sort Adrian, Robert James
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Evidence supports an ultrasound-guided approach in patients with difficult vascular access. Prior research on teaching ultrasound-guided intravenous access has included only small groups of first- and second-year medical students. METHODS: We enrolled fourth-year medical students in our teaching module. The module featured a 6-minute prelearning narrated lecture and 5-minute orientation, followed by ultrasound-guided IV placement on homemade gel models. Facilitators were emergency medicine (EM) residents with a prespecified level of procedural ultrasound skills according to EM milestones. Students completed pre- and postmodule surveys. Facilitators completed the Directly Observed Procedural Skills Evaluation. Primary outcomes included global rating, proficiency on six procedural skills, and perceived learning. RESULTS: Our module was completed by 150 fourth-year medical students (94% of the class); 84% cannulated the vein in one attempt. We used a global rating scale to describe the students' cannulation abilities; 59% were trusted to perform this procedure with direct supervision and coaching, 29% with indirect supervision, and 8% without supervision. There was no association between a student's order of attempting IV access within the group and global rating (p = .41). Students reported increased understanding of indications, antecubital anatomy, sonographic anatomy, and procedural comfort (12%, 29%, 38%, and 65% improvement pre- vs. postmodule, respectively; p < .001). DISCUSSION: Our module enabled more than one-third of fourth-year medical students to achieve an indirect supervision or better level of proficiency in ultrasound-guided IV access, with significant improvements in perceived knowledge. This module may be useful for other educators facilitating the transition to residency.
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spelling pubmed-88076632022-02-07 Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students Adrian, Robert James Choi, April Lamba, Sangeeta Ostrovsky, Ilya Ramdin, Christine Traba, Christin Chen, Sophia Sudyn, Alexander Alerhand, Stephen MedEdPORTAL Original Publication INTRODUCTION: Evidence supports an ultrasound-guided approach in patients with difficult vascular access. Prior research on teaching ultrasound-guided intravenous access has included only small groups of first- and second-year medical students. METHODS: We enrolled fourth-year medical students in our teaching module. The module featured a 6-minute prelearning narrated lecture and 5-minute orientation, followed by ultrasound-guided IV placement on homemade gel models. Facilitators were emergency medicine (EM) residents with a prespecified level of procedural ultrasound skills according to EM milestones. Students completed pre- and postmodule surveys. Facilitators completed the Directly Observed Procedural Skills Evaluation. Primary outcomes included global rating, proficiency on six procedural skills, and perceived learning. RESULTS: Our module was completed by 150 fourth-year medical students (94% of the class); 84% cannulated the vein in one attempt. We used a global rating scale to describe the students' cannulation abilities; 59% were trusted to perform this procedure with direct supervision and coaching, 29% with indirect supervision, and 8% without supervision. There was no association between a student's order of attempting IV access within the group and global rating (p = .41). Students reported increased understanding of indications, antecubital anatomy, sonographic anatomy, and procedural comfort (12%, 29%, 38%, and 65% improvement pre- vs. postmodule, respectively; p < .001). DISCUSSION: Our module enabled more than one-third of fourth-year medical students to achieve an indirect supervision or better level of proficiency in ultrasound-guided IV access, with significant improvements in perceived knowledge. This module may be useful for other educators facilitating the transition to residency. Association of American Medical Colleges 2022-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8807663/ /pubmed/35136837 http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11222 Text en © 2022 Adrian et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) license.
spellingShingle Original Publication
Adrian, Robert James
Choi, April
Lamba, Sangeeta
Ostrovsky, Ilya
Ramdin, Christine
Traba, Christin
Chen, Sophia
Sudyn, Alexander
Alerhand, Stephen
Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students
title Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students
title_full Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students
title_fullStr Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students
title_short Teaching Module on Ultrasound-Guided Venous Access Using a Homemade Gel Model for Fourth-Year Medical Students
title_sort teaching module on ultrasound-guided venous access using a homemade gel model for fourth-year medical students
topic Original Publication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8807663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35136837
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11222
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