| Literature DB >> 32399529 |
Beatrice Hoffmann1, Michael Blaivas2, Jacques Abramowicz3, Michael Bachmann4, Radu Badea5, Barbara Braden6, Vito Cantisani7, Maria C Chammas8, Xin-Wu Cui9, Yi Dong10, Odd Helge Gilja11, Roman Hari12, Hein Lamprecht13, Harvey Nisenbaum14, Christian Pállson Nolsøe15, Dieter Nürnberg16, Helmut Prosch17, Maija Radzina18, Florian Recker19, Alexander Sachs20, Adrian Saftoiu21, Andreas Serra22, Sudhir Vinayak23, Sue Westerway24, Yi-Hong Chou25, Christoph F Dietrich26.
Abstract
Ultrasound is becoming a fundamental first-line diagnostic tool for most medical specialties and an innovative tool to teach anatomy, physiology and pathophysiology to undergraduate and graduate students. However, availability of structured training programs during medical school is lagging behind and many physicians still acquire all their ultrasound skills during postgraduate training.There is wide variation in medical student ultrasound education worldwide. Sharing successful educational strategies from early adopter medical schools and learning from leading education programs should advance the integration of ultrasound into the university medical school curricula. In this overview, we present current approaches and suggestions by ultrasound societies concerning medical student educa-tion throughout the world. Based on these examples, we formulate a consensus statement with suggestions on how to integrate ultrasound teaching into the preclinical and clinical medical curricula.Year: 2020 PMID: 32399529 DOI: 10.11152/mu-2599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Ultrason ISSN: 1844-4172 Impact factor: 1.611