Hospitalist use of hand-carried ultrasound: Preparing for battle
✍ Scribed by Bruce J. Kimura; Stan A. Amundson; David J. Shaw
- Book ID
- 102341622
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 169 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1553-5592
- DOI
- 10.1002/jhm.591
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Hand‐carried ultrasound (HCU) is a burgeoning technology at a critical point in its development as a general diagnostic technique. Despite the known safety and accuracy of ultrasound in radiology and echocardiography, the use of HCU to augment physical diagnosis by all physicians has yet unrealized potential. In order to incorporate ultrasound into a diagnostic model of routine bedside application, simple imaging and training protocols must first be derived and validated. Simplified cardiac ultrasound exams have already been validated to detect evidence‐based targets such as subclinical atherosclerosis, heart failure, and elevated central venous pressures. However, for general examination of the acutely ill patient, it is the internist‐hospitalist who should derive a full‐body ultrasound examination, balancing training requirements with the numerous clinical applications potentially available. As the hospital's leading diagnostician with ultrasound expertise available in‐house, the hospitalist could develop HCU so as to triage and refer more appropriately and limit unnecessary testing and hospital stays. Active involvement by hospitalists now in the planning of outcome, validation, and training studies, will be invaluable in the formation of an “ultrasound‐assisted” physical examination in the future and will promote competent, cost‐effective applications of HCU within general medical practice. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2010;5:163–167. © 2010 Society of Hospital Medicine.
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## Abstract In the right hands, ultrasound is a safe and helpful diagnostic imaging tool. However, evidence supporting the use of hand‐carried ultrasound (HCU) by hospitalist physicians has not kept pace with expanding application of these devices. In spite of its strategic point‐of‐care benefit, u
## Abstract ## BACKGROUND: The duration of training needed for hospitalists to accurately perform hand‐carried ultrasound echocardiography (HCUE) is uncertain. ## OBJECTIVE: To determine the diagnostic accuracy of HCUE performed by hospitalists after a 27‐hour training program. ## DESIGN: Pros