Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills

Abstract Background Current methods of assessing competence in acquiring point-of-care ultrasound images are inadequate. They rely upon cumbersome rating systems that do not depend on the actual outcome measured and lack evidence of validity. We describe a new method that uses a rigorous statistical...

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Main Authors: Brian P. Lucas, Antonietta D’Addio, Clay Block, Harold L. Manning, Brian Remillard, James C. Leiter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-02-01
Series:The Ultrasound Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13089-019-0119-6
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spelling doaj-bd43050dfbeb415d9767f0c870b00c082020-11-25T01:12:55ZengSpringerOpenThe Ultrasound Journal2524-89872019-02-011111910.1186/s13089-019-0119-6Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skillsBrian P. Lucas0Antonietta D’Addio1Clay Block2Harold L. Manning3Brian Remillard4James C. Leiter5Medicine Service, White River Junction VA Medical CenterGeisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth CollegeMedicine Service, White River Junction VA Medical CenterGeisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth CollegeGeisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth CollegeGeisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth CollegeAbstract Background Current methods of assessing competence in acquiring point-of-care ultrasound images are inadequate. They rely upon cumbersome rating systems that do not depend on the actual outcome measured and lack evidence of validity. We describe a new method that uses a rigorous statistical model to assess performance of individual trainees based on the actual task, image acquisition. Measurements obtained from the images acquired (the actual desired outcome) are themselves used to validate effective training and competence acquiring ultrasound images. We enrolled a convenience sample of 21 spontaneously breathing adults from a general medicine ward. In random order, two trainees (A and B) and an instructor contemporaneously acquired point-of-care ultrasound images of the inferior vena cava and the right internal jugular vein from the same patients. Blinded diameter measurements from each ultrasound were analyzed quantitatively using a multilevel model. Consistent mean differences between each trainee’s and the instructor’s images were ascribed to systematic acquisition errors, indicative of poor measurement technique and a need for further training. Wider variances were attributed to sporadic errors, indicative of inconsistent application of measurement technique across patients. In addition, the instructor recorded qualitative observations of each trainee’s performance during image acquisition. Results For all four diameters, the means and variances of measurements from trainee A’s images differed significantly from the instructor’s, whereas those from trainee B’s images were comparable. Techniques directly observed by the instructor supported these model-derived findings. For example, mean anteroposterior diameters of the internal jugular vein obtained from trainee A’s images were 3.8 mm (90% CI 2.3–5.4) smaller than from the instructor’s; this model-derived finding matched the instructor’s observation that trainee A compressed the vein during acquisition. Instructor summative assessments agreed with model-derived findings, providing internal validation of the descriptive and quantitative assessments of competence acquiring ultrasound images. Conclusions Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images acquired contemporaneously by trainees and an instructor can be used to quantitatively assess the image acquisition competence of specific trainees. This method may obviate resource-intensive qualitative rating systems that are based on ultrasound image quality and direct observation, while also helping instructors guide remediation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13089-019-0119-6Clinical competencePoint-of-care systemsAnthropometryUltrasonographyMultilevel analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian P. Lucas
Antonietta D’Addio
Clay Block
Harold L. Manning
Brian Remillard
James C. Leiter
spellingShingle Brian P. Lucas
Antonietta D’Addio
Clay Block
Harold L. Manning
Brian Remillard
James C. Leiter
Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
The Ultrasound Journal
Clinical competence
Point-of-care systems
Anthropometry
Ultrasonography
Multilevel analysis
author_facet Brian P. Lucas
Antonietta D’Addio
Clay Block
Harold L. Manning
Brian Remillard
James C. Leiter
author_sort Brian P. Lucas
title Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
title_short Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
title_full Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
title_fullStr Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
title_full_unstemmed Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
title_sort clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images to assess acquisition skills
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Ultrasound Journal
issn 2524-8987
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background Current methods of assessing competence in acquiring point-of-care ultrasound images are inadequate. They rely upon cumbersome rating systems that do not depend on the actual outcome measured and lack evidence of validity. We describe a new method that uses a rigorous statistical model to assess performance of individual trainees based on the actual task, image acquisition. Measurements obtained from the images acquired (the actual desired outcome) are themselves used to validate effective training and competence acquiring ultrasound images. We enrolled a convenience sample of 21 spontaneously breathing adults from a general medicine ward. In random order, two trainees (A and B) and an instructor contemporaneously acquired point-of-care ultrasound images of the inferior vena cava and the right internal jugular vein from the same patients. Blinded diameter measurements from each ultrasound were analyzed quantitatively using a multilevel model. Consistent mean differences between each trainee’s and the instructor’s images were ascribed to systematic acquisition errors, indicative of poor measurement technique and a need for further training. Wider variances were attributed to sporadic errors, indicative of inconsistent application of measurement technique across patients. In addition, the instructor recorded qualitative observations of each trainee’s performance during image acquisition. Results For all four diameters, the means and variances of measurements from trainee A’s images differed significantly from the instructor’s, whereas those from trainee B’s images were comparable. Techniques directly observed by the instructor supported these model-derived findings. For example, mean anteroposterior diameters of the internal jugular vein obtained from trainee A’s images were 3.8 mm (90% CI 2.3–5.4) smaller than from the instructor’s; this model-derived finding matched the instructor’s observation that trainee A compressed the vein during acquisition. Instructor summative assessments agreed with model-derived findings, providing internal validation of the descriptive and quantitative assessments of competence acquiring ultrasound images. Conclusions Clinical measurements obtained from point-of-care ultrasound images acquired contemporaneously by trainees and an instructor can be used to quantitatively assess the image acquisition competence of specific trainees. This method may obviate resource-intensive qualitative rating systems that are based on ultrasound image quality and direct observation, while also helping instructors guide remediation.
topic Clinical competence
Point-of-care systems
Anthropometry
Ultrasonography
Multilevel analysis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13089-019-0119-6
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