Trends in point‐of‐care ultrasound use among emergency medicine residency programs over a 10‐year period

Author:

Gottlieb Michael1ORCID,Cooney Robert2ORCID,King Andrew3ORCID,Mannix Alexandra4ORCID,Krzyzaniak Sara5ORCID,Jordan Jaime6ORCID,Shappell Eric7ORCID,Fix Megan8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine Rush University Medical Center Chicago Illinois USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine Geisinger Medical Center Danville Pennsylvania USA

3. Department of Emergency Medicine The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center Columbus Ohio USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Florida College of Medicine–Jacksonville Jacksonville Florida USA

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Stanford University Palo Alto California USA

6. Department of Emergency Medicine David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Los Angeles California USA

7. Department of Emergency Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

8. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Utah Hospital Salt Lake City Utah USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPoint‐of‐care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly utilized in emergency medicine (EM). While residents are required by the Accreditation Council for General Medical Education to complete a minimum of 150 POCUS examinations before graduation, the distribution of examination types is not well‐described. This study sought to assess the number and distribution of POCUS examinations completed during EM residency training and evaluate trends over time.MethodsThis was a 10‐year retrospective review of POCUS examinations across five EM residency programs. The study sites were deliberately selected to represent diversity in program type, program length, and geography. Data from EM residents graduating from 2013 to 2022 were eligible for inclusion. Exclusion criteria were residents in combined training programs, residents who did not complete all training at one institution, and residents who did not have data available. Examination types were identified from the American College of Emergency Physicians guidelines for POCUS. Each site obtained POCUS examination totals for every resident upon graduation. We calculated the mean and 95% confidence interval for each procedure across study years.ResultsA total of 535 residents were eligible for inclusion, with 524 (97.9%) meeting all inclusion criteria. The mean number of POCUS examinations per resident increased by 46.9% from 277 in 2013 to 407 in 2022. All examination types had stable or increasing frequency. Focused assessment with sonography in trauma (FAST), cardiac, obstetric/gynecologic, and renal/bladder were performed most frequently. Ocular, deep venous thrombosis, musculoskeletal, skin/soft tissue, thoracic, and cardiac examinations had the largest percentage increase in numbers over the 10‐year period, while bowel and testicular POCUS remained rare.ConclusionsThere was an overall increase in the number of POCUS examinations performed by EM residents over the past 10 years, with FAST, cardiac, obstetric/gynecologic, and renal/bladder being the most common examination types. Among less common procedures, increased frequency may be needed to ensure competence and avoid skill decay for those examination types. This information can help inform POCUS training in residency and accreditation requirements.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Nursing,Education,Emergency Medicine

Reference24 articles.

1. Some recollections of early work with bedside ultrasound in emergency medicine: the first 10 years

2. Model curriculum for physician training in emergency ultrasonography

3. CORD-AEUS: Consensus Document for the Emergency Ultrasound Milestone Project

4. The 2019 Model of the Clinical Practice of Emergency Medicine

5. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.Emergency Medicine Defined Key Index Procedure Minimums. Accessed January 23 2023.https://www.acgme.org/globalassets/pfassets/programresources/em_key_index_procedure_minimums_103117.pdf

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