Abstract

BackgroundLung ultrasound (LUS) is helpful for the evaluation of patients with dyspnea in the emergency department (ED). However, it remains unclear how much training and how many LUS examinations are needed for ED physicians to obtain proficiency. The objective of this study was to determine the threshold number of LUS physicians need to perform to achieve proficiency for interpreting LUS on ED patients with dyspnea.MethodsA prospective study was performed at Patan Hospital in Nepal, evaluating proficiency of physicians novice to LUS. After eight hours of didactics and hands-on training, physicians independently performed and interpreted ultrasounds on patients presenting to the ED with dyspnea. An expert sonographer blinded to patient data and LUS interpretation reviewed images and provided an expert interpretation. Interobserver agreement was performed between the study physician and expert physician interpretation. Cumulative sum analysis was used to determine the number of scans required to attain an acceptable level of training.ResultsNineteen physicians were included in the study, submitting 330 LUS examinations with 3288 lung zones. Eighteen physicians (95%) reached proficiency. Physicians reached proficiency for interpreting LUS accurately when compared to an expert after 4.4 (SD 2.2) LUS studies for individual zone interpretation and 4.8 (SD 2.3) studies for overall interpretation, respectively.ConclusionsFollowing 1 day of training, the majority of physicians novice to LUS achieved proficiency with interpretation of lung ultrasound after less than five ultrasound examinations performed independently.

Highlights

  • Lung ultrasound (LUS) is an effective tool to evaluate patients with dyspnea in the emergency department (ED) [1,2,3,4,5]

  • There remains a lack of evidence regarding the amount of training and the number of LUS examinations needed to attain proficiency for evaluating the undifferentiated dyspneic patient presenting to the ED

  • Twenty-one physicians were enrolled in the study; two physicians withdrew from the study after leaving the hospital for personal reasons, leaving nineteen physicians who completed the study

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Summary

Introduction

There remains a lack of evidence regarding the amount of training and the number of LUS examinations needed to attain proficiency for evaluating the undifferentiated dyspneic patient presenting to the ED. This is of particular importance in a resource-limited setting where radiographs are harder to obtain. The objective of this study was to determine the threshold number of LUS examinations physicians need to perform to achieve proficiency for interpreting LUS in ED patients with dyspnea. Lung ultrasound (LUS) is helpful for the evaluation of patients with dyspnea in the emergency department (ED) It remains unclear how much training and how many LUS examinations are needed for ED physicians to obtain proficiency. The objective of this study was to determine the threshold number of LUS physicians need to perform to achieve proficiency for interpreting LUS on ED patients with dyspnea

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