| Literature DB >> 27452408 |
Taft Micks1, Kyle Sue1, Peter Rogers1.
Abstract
Over the past few decades, point-of-care ultrasound (PoCUS) has come to play a major role in the practice of emergency medicine. Despite its numerous benefits, there has been a slow uptake of PoCUS use in rural emergency departments. Surveys conducted across Canada and the United States have identified a lack of equipment, training, funding, quality assurance, and an inability to maintain skills as major barriers to PoCUS use. Potential solutions include expanding residency training in ultrasound skills, extending funding for PoCUS training to rural physicians in practice, moving PoCUS training courses to rural sites, and creating telesonography training for rural physicians. With these barriers identified and solutions proposed, corrective measures must be taken so that the benefits of PoCUS are extended to patients in rural Canada where, arguably, it has the greatest potential for benefit when access to advanced imaging is not readily available.Entities:
Keywords: PoCUS; emergency department; point-of-care; rural; ultrasound
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27452408 DOI: 10.1017/cem.2016.337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CJEM ISSN: 1481-8035 Impact factor: 2.410