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Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum

Purpose: To determine medical student ability to accurately obtain and interpret POCUS exams of varying difficulty in the pediatric population after a short didactic and hands-on POCUS course. Methods: Five medical students were trained in four POCUS applications (bladder volume, long bone for fract...

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Autores principales: Cooper, Michael C, Jones, Jodi, Pascual, Mandy, Field, Steven, Rendon, Juan M, Kulstad, Christine, Dixon, Bryant, Pham Tu, Kristie, Narayan, Aman, Pyle, Hunter, Hoang, Khiem, Han, Anthony, Bahga, Dalbir, Pandey, Aman, Roppolo, Lynn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9979915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36896274
http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/pocus.v7i1.15625
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author Cooper, Michael C
Jones, Jodi
Pascual, Mandy
Field, Steven
Rendon, Juan M
Kulstad, Christine
Dixon, Bryant
Pham Tu, Kristie
Narayan, Aman
Pyle, Hunter
Hoang, Khiem
Han, Anthony
Bahga, Dalbir
Pandey, Aman
Roppolo, Lynn
author_facet Cooper, Michael C
Jones, Jodi
Pascual, Mandy
Field, Steven
Rendon, Juan M
Kulstad, Christine
Dixon, Bryant
Pham Tu, Kristie
Narayan, Aman
Pyle, Hunter
Hoang, Khiem
Han, Anthony
Bahga, Dalbir
Pandey, Aman
Roppolo, Lynn
author_sort Cooper, Michael C
collection PubMed
description Purpose: To determine medical student ability to accurately obtain and interpret POCUS exams of varying difficulty in the pediatric population after a short didactic and hands-on POCUS course. Methods: Five medical students were trained in four POCUS applications (bladder volume, long bone for fracture, limited cardiac for left ventricular function, & inferior vena cava collapsibility) and enrolled pediatric ED patients. Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians reviewed each scan for image quality and interpretation accuracy using the American College of Emergency Physicians’ quality assessment scale. We report acceptable scan frequency and medical student vs. Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physician interpretation agreement with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 51/53 bladder volume scans as acceptable (96.2%; 95% CI 87.3-99.0%) and agreed with 50/53 bladder volume calculations (94.3%; 95% CI 88.1-100%). Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 35/37 long bone scans as acceptable (94.6%; 95% CI 82.3-98.5%) and agreed with 32/37 medical student long bone scan interpretations (86.5%; 95% CI 72.0-94.1%). Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 116/120 cardiac scans as acceptable (96.7%; 95% CI 91.7-98.7%) and agreed with 111/120 medical student left ventricular function interpretations (92.5%; 95% CI 86.4-96.0%). Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 99/117 inferior vena cava scans as acceptable (84.6%; 95% CI 77.0-90.0%) and agreed with 101/117 medical student interpretations of inferior vena cava collapsibility (86.3%; 95% CI 78.9-91.4%). Conclusions: Medical students demonstrated satisfactory ability within a short period of time in a range of POCUS scans on pediatric patients after a novel curriculum. This supports the incorporation of a formal POCUS education into medical school curricula and suggests that novice POCUS learners can attain a measure of competency in multiple applications after a short training course.
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spelling pubmed-99799152023-03-08 Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum Cooper, Michael C Jones, Jodi Pascual, Mandy Field, Steven Rendon, Juan M Kulstad, Christine Dixon, Bryant Pham Tu, Kristie Narayan, Aman Pyle, Hunter Hoang, Khiem Han, Anthony Bahga, Dalbir Pandey, Aman Roppolo, Lynn POCUS J Medicine Purpose: To determine medical student ability to accurately obtain and interpret POCUS exams of varying difficulty in the pediatric population after a short didactic and hands-on POCUS course. Methods: Five medical students were trained in four POCUS applications (bladder volume, long bone for fracture, limited cardiac for left ventricular function, & inferior vena cava collapsibility) and enrolled pediatric ED patients. Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians reviewed each scan for image quality and interpretation accuracy using the American College of Emergency Physicians’ quality assessment scale. We report acceptable scan frequency and medical student vs. Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physician interpretation agreement with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 51/53 bladder volume scans as acceptable (96.2%; 95% CI 87.3-99.0%) and agreed with 50/53 bladder volume calculations (94.3%; 95% CI 88.1-100%). Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 35/37 long bone scans as acceptable (94.6%; 95% CI 82.3-98.5%) and agreed with 32/37 medical student long bone scan interpretations (86.5%; 95% CI 72.0-94.1%). Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 116/120 cardiac scans as acceptable (96.7%; 95% CI 91.7-98.7%) and agreed with 111/120 medical student left ventricular function interpretations (92.5%; 95% CI 86.4-96.0%). Ultrasound-fellowship-trained emergency medicine physicians graded 99/117 inferior vena cava scans as acceptable (84.6%; 95% CI 77.0-90.0%) and agreed with 101/117 medical student interpretations of inferior vena cava collapsibility (86.3%; 95% CI 78.9-91.4%). Conclusions: Medical students demonstrated satisfactory ability within a short period of time in a range of POCUS scans on pediatric patients after a novel curriculum. This supports the incorporation of a formal POCUS education into medical school curricula and suggests that novice POCUS learners can attain a measure of competency in multiple applications after a short training course. 2022-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9979915/ /pubmed/36896274 http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/pocus.v7i1.15625 Text en Copyright (c) 2022 Michael C. Cooper, Jodi Jones, Mandy Pascual, Steven Field, Juan M. Rendon, Christine Kulstad, Bryant Dixon, Kristie Pham Tu, Aman Narayan, Hunter Pyle, Khiem Hoang, Anthony Han, Dalbir Bahga, Aman Pandey, Lynn Roppolo 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
Cooper, Michael C
Jones, Jodi
Pascual, Mandy
Field, Steven
Rendon, Juan M
Kulstad, Christine
Dixon, Bryant
Pham Tu, Kristie
Narayan, Aman
Pyle, Hunter
Hoang, Khiem
Han, Anthony
Bahga, Dalbir
Pandey, Aman
Roppolo, Lynn
Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum
title Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum
title_full Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum
title_fullStr Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum
title_full_unstemmed Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum
title_short Can Medical Students Learn and Perform POCUS in the Pediatric Emergency Department? Implementation of a Short Curriculum
title_sort can medical students learn and perform pocus in the pediatric emergency department? implementation of a short curriculum
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9979915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36896274
http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/pocus.v7i1.15625
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