Utility of Point of Care Ultrasound in Humanitarian Assistance Missions

Author:

Sullivan John F1,Polly Matheus2,Roman John W3,Milder Edmund A4,Carter E1,Lennon Robert P15

Affiliation:

1. Naval Hospital Jacksonville, Department of Family Medicine, 2080 Child Street, Jacksonville, FL 32214, USA

2. University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Department of Infectious Disease, Sao Paulo, SP 05403000, Brazil

3. Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Department of Dermatology, 620 John Paul Jones Circle, Portsmouth, VA 23708, USA

4. Naval Medical Center San Diego, Department of Pediatrics, 34800 Bob Wilson Drive, San Diego, CA 92134, USA

5. Penn State College of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, 500 University Drive, Hershey, PA 17033, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Point of care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly used in primary care in the USA and has been shown to provide significant benefit to care in deployed military settings and during disaster relief efforts. It is less studied as a tool during humanitarian assistance missions. We sought to determine the utility of POCUS in a humanitarian assistance setting during the February 2019 joint U.S.–Brazilian hospital assistance mission aboard the Hospitalar Assistance Ship Carlos Chagas along the Madeira River in the Brazilian Amazon. Materials and Methods Point of care ultrasound was offered as a diagnostic modality to primary care physicians during the course of a month-long mission. A handheld IVIZ ultrasound machine was loaned for use during this mission by Sonosite. A P21v phased array (5-1 MHz) or an L38v linear (10-5 MHz) transducer was used for scanning. Requests for POCUS examinations, their findings, and changes in patient management were recorded. Results Point of care ultrasound examinations were requested and performed in 24 of 814 (3%) outpatient primary care visits. Ten of these studies (42% of POCUS examinations, 1.2% of all patient visits) directed patient management decisions, in each case preventing unnecessary referral. Conclusions In this austere setting, POCUS proved to be an inexpensive, effective tool at preventing unnecessary referrals. Future medical humanitarian assistance missions may likewise find POCUS to be a primary care force-multiplier.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

Reference22 articles.

1. Point-of-care ultrasonography for primary care physicians and general internists;Bhagra;Mayo Clin Proc,2016

2. Point of care ultrasound in family medicine residency programs: a CERA study;Hall;Fam Med,2015

3. Portable handheld ultrasound in austere environments: use in the Haiti disaster;Shorter;Prehosp Disaster Med,2012

4. Point-of-care ultrasound in resource-limited settings: common applications;Fentress;South Med J,2018

5. Out of hospital point of care ultrasound: current use models and future directions;Nelson;Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg,2016

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