Recommendations for developing a comprehensive point‐of‐care ultrasound (POCUS) program in the emergency department: an Emergency Medicine Ultrasound Group advocacy statement

Author:

Phillips Luke12345ORCID,Maclean Alastair56ORCID,Monester Josh25,Douglas Joanne57,Davidson Stacey5ORCID,King Gabriela589

Affiliation:

1. Emergency Department Mater Misericordiae University Hospital Dublin Ireland

2. Emergency and Trauma Centre Alfred Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. Faculty of Medicine University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

4. Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. Emergency Medicine Ultrasound Group (Aus/NZ) Melbourne Victoria Australia

6. Emergency Department Te Whatu Ora Hauora a toi (Tauranga Hospital) Tauranga New Zealand

7. Australasian Society for Ultrasound in Medicine Sydney New South Wales Australia

8. Emergency Department Te Toka Tumai (Auckland City Hospital) Auckland New Zealand

9. Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesPoint‐of‐care ultrasound (POCUS) use is widespread in EDs and throughout those practising medicine. Between institutions and specialities, there is widespread variety and training. With this comes the risk of patient harm and backlash to a clinically useful modality. Our objective is to form a statement that encompasses current published and unpublished guidance for creating and maintaining robust POCUS programs in EDs.MethodsEmergency Medicine Ultrasound Group (EMUG) identified this gap and volunteers from the group undertook a literature search of current best practice and institution guidelines relating to POCUS programs. They contacted colleagues from other specialities to find and get access to other countries and colleges' POCUS guidelines. EMUGs regularly run discussion forums (Collab‐labs) and points from these were considered. Recommendations were then formed from these and recurrent unpublished obstacles the group had encountered. The result was reviewed by clinical leaders in ultrasound and POCUS users in Australasia.ResultsThe recommendations were organised under five pillars: Infrastructure, Governance, Administration, Education and Quality.ConclusionThese recommendations complement existing guidelines and are not intended to replace them; however, we hope to promote discussion and provide reference support for those developing POCUS programs. Implementing a comprehensive and robust ED POCUS program will ensure safe, effective and standardised high‐quality POCUS use, with the aim of improving patient care across Australia and New Zealand. Patient safety will be enhanced through effective risk management and quality assurance and there will be consistency in POCUS education, training and credentialing across institutions.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference20 articles.

1. Australasian emergency ultrasound: A survey on the current status

2. Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.Policy P733: Reccomendations for Health Service Credentialing – EM Ultrasonography (V6) [Internet]. 2023. Available from URL:https://acem.org.au/getmedia/ee68a734‐7634‐425d‐865a‐f5e17dc8b4e4/P733_Policy‐on‐Credentialing‐for‐Emergency‐Medicine‐Ultrasonography_v1_Aug‐2019

3. Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.Provision of Focused Ultrasound Training and Governance Guidelines (COR742) V6 [Internet]. 2023. Available from URL:https://acem.org.au/getmedia/0702004f‐c669‐4646‐b5fc‐4fa577117ba3/COR742‐Guideline‐for‐the‐Provision‐of‐ED‐Focused‐Ultrasound‐Training‐and‐Governance

4. Time to establish pillars in point-of-care ultrasound

5. American College of Emergency Physicians.American College of Emergency Physicians Policy Statement ‐ Ultrasound Guidelines: Emergency Point‐of‐care and Clinical Ultrasound Guidelines in Medicine [Internet]. 2023. Available from URL:https://www.acep.org/patient‐care/policy‐statements/ultrasound‐guidelines‐emergency‐point‐of‐‐care‐and‐clinical‐ultrasound‐guidelines‐in‐medicine

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