Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine

Objectives   Point of care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly used in rural settings where it’s portability,and imaging capabilities make it effective clinically. POCUS teaching has traditionally relied on faculty instruction, which is limited by the small number of certified faculty members. Th...

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Main Authors: Michel Khoury, Shankar Sethuraman, Samuel Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Ottawa 2019-12-01
Series:University of Ottawa Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ottawa/index.php/uojm-jmuo/article/view/4475
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spelling doaj-f42cd438f81e4c7cb46cb74f4853d0b02020-11-25T01:17:05ZengUniversity of OttawaUniversity of Ottawa Journal of Medicine2292-650X2292-65182019-12-019210.18192/uojm.v9i2.4475Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural MedicineMichel KhouryShankar SethuramanSamuel Wilson0{'en_US': 'BSc'}Objectives   Point of care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly used in rural settings where it’s portability,and imaging capabilities make it effective clinically. POCUS teaching has traditionally relied on faculty instruction, which is limited by the small number of certified faculty members. The UOttawa POCUS interest group deployed peer-teaching since 2018, which overcomes the instructor barrier by employing experienced medical students to train preclerkship students. This paper will evaluate the efficacy of the peer-led POCUS workshops as a learning format.   Methods   3-hour POCUS workshops were held for Cardiac, MSK, Aorta, and eFAST scans from October 2018 to June 2019. Students with prior experience in POCUS were identified as peer-teachers, and were trained by an expert physician prior to the workshop. Peer-teachers taught a small group, with physician experts rotating through groups for technical support. Surveys were sent out to students who participated in the workshops assessing the following categories:utility, learning experience,workshop efficacy, tutor competence, and interest. Descriptive statistics and thematic analysis was reported for the quantitative and qualitative data, respectively.   Results   45 participants completed the survey. The surveys showed positive support for the aforementioned categories, with the average score being greater than 4. From the thematic analysis, the four main strengths of the peer-led format are: Trainer competence, learner comfort, situational teaching, and opportunity to practice.    Conclusion   Peer-led workshops are an effective format for POCUS training in instructor-constrained settings. These workshops can be translated to rural settings in lieu of a formal POCUS training program. https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ottawa/index.php/uojm-jmuo/article/view/4475Point-of-care ultrasoundInnovationPeer-teachingPre-clerkship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel Khoury
Shankar Sethuraman
Samuel Wilson
spellingShingle Michel Khoury
Shankar Sethuraman
Samuel Wilson
Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine
University of Ottawa Journal of Medicine
Point-of-care ultrasound
Innovation
Peer-teaching
Pre-clerkship
author_facet Michel Khoury
Shankar Sethuraman
Samuel Wilson
author_sort Michel Khoury
title Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine
title_short Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine
title_full Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine
title_fullStr Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Peer-Led Point-of-Care Ultrasound; A Potential Ally to Rural Medicine
title_sort peer-led point-of-care ultrasound; a potential ally to rural medicine
publisher University of Ottawa
series University of Ottawa Journal of Medicine
issn 2292-650X
2292-6518
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Objectives   Point of care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly used in rural settings where it’s portability,and imaging capabilities make it effective clinically. POCUS teaching has traditionally relied on faculty instruction, which is limited by the small number of certified faculty members. The UOttawa POCUS interest group deployed peer-teaching since 2018, which overcomes the instructor barrier by employing experienced medical students to train preclerkship students. This paper will evaluate the efficacy of the peer-led POCUS workshops as a learning format.   Methods   3-hour POCUS workshops were held for Cardiac, MSK, Aorta, and eFAST scans from October 2018 to June 2019. Students with prior experience in POCUS were identified as peer-teachers, and were trained by an expert physician prior to the workshop. Peer-teachers taught a small group, with physician experts rotating through groups for technical support. Surveys were sent out to students who participated in the workshops assessing the following categories:utility, learning experience,workshop efficacy, tutor competence, and interest. Descriptive statistics and thematic analysis was reported for the quantitative and qualitative data, respectively.   Results   45 participants completed the survey. The surveys showed positive support for the aforementioned categories, with the average score being greater than 4. From the thematic analysis, the four main strengths of the peer-led format are: Trainer competence, learner comfort, situational teaching, and opportunity to practice.    Conclusion   Peer-led workshops are an effective format for POCUS training in instructor-constrained settings. These workshops can be translated to rural settings in lieu of a formal POCUS training program.
topic Point-of-care ultrasound
Innovation
Peer-teaching
Pre-clerkship
url https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ottawa/index.php/uojm-jmuo/article/view/4475
work_keys_str_mv AT michelkhoury peerledpointofcareultrasoundapotentialallytoruralmedicine
AT shankarsethuraman peerledpointofcareultrasoundapotentialallytoruralmedicine
AT samuelwilson peerledpointofcareultrasoundapotentialallytoruralmedicine
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