The Development, Implementation, and Evolution of an Emergency Medicine Ultrasound-guided Regional Anesthesia Curriculum.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Sally Graglia, Derek Harmon, Barbie Klein
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Abstract

Introduction: Despite the inclusion of both diagnostic and procedural ultrasound and regional nerve blocks in the original Model of the Clinical Practice of Emergency Medicine (EM), there is no recommended standardized approach to the incorporation of ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia (UGRA) education in EM training.

Methods: We developed and implemented a structured curriculum for both EM residents and faculty to learn UGRA in a four-hour workshop. Each Regional Anesthesia Anatomy and Ultrasound Workshop was four hours in length and followed the same format. Focusing on common UGRA blocks, each workshop began with an anatomist-led cadaveric review of the relevant neuromusculoskeletal anatomy followed by a hands-on ultrasound scanning practice for the blocks led by an ultrasound fellowship-trained EM faculty member, fellow, or a postgraduate year (PGY)-4 resident who had previously participated in the workshop. Learners identified the relevant anatomy on point-of-care ultrasound and reviewed how to conduct the blocks. Learners were invited to complete an evaluation of the workshop with Likert-scale and open-ended questions.

Results: In the 2020 academic year, six regional anesthesia anatomy and ultrasound workshops occurred for EM faculty (two sessions, N = 24) and EM residents (four sessions, N = 40, including a total of five PGY4s, 10 PGY3s, 12 PGY2s, and 13 PGY1s). Workshops were universally well-received by both faculty and residents. Survey results found that 100.0% of all responding participants indicated that they were "very satisfied" with the session. All were likely to recommend this session to a colleague and 95.08% of participants believed the session should become a required component of the EM curriculum.

Conclusion: The use of UGRA is increasing, and and it critical in EM. An interdisciplinary approach in collaboration with anatomists on an interactive, nerve block workshop incorporating both gross anatomy review and hands-on scanning was shown to be well-received and desired by both EM faculty and residents.

急诊医学超声引导区域麻醉课程的开发、实施和演变。
简介:尽管最初的《急诊医学临床实践模式》(EM)中包含了诊断性和程序性超声以及区域神经阻滞,但并没有推荐将超声引导区域麻醉(UGRA)教育纳入急诊医学培训的标准化方法:我们为急诊科住院医师和教师开发并实施了结构化课程,让他们在四小时的研讨会中学习 UGRA。每期区域麻醉解剖与超声讲习班为期四小时,采用相同的形式。每期讲习班以常见的 UGRA 阻滞为重点,首先由解剖学家带领学员回顾相关的神经肌肉骨骼解剖,然后由受过超声研究培训的急诊科教师、研究员或之前参加过讲习班的研究生年级 (PGY)-4 的住院医师带领学员进行阻滞的超声扫描实践。学员们确定了护理点超声上的相关解剖结构,并复习了如何进行阻滞。学员们应邀完成了对研讨会的评估,评估采用李克特量表和开放式问题:在2020学年,为急诊科教师(两场,24人)和急诊科住院医师(四场,40人,包括5名PGY4、10名PGY3、12名PGY2和13名PGY1)举办了六场区域麻醉解剖和超声研讨会。研讨会受到了教师和住院医师的普遍欢迎。调查结果显示,100.0% 的受访者表示对课程 "非常满意"。95.08%的参与者认为该课程应成为内科课程的必修课程:结论:UGRA 的使用正在不断增加,它在电磁学中至关重要。通过与解剖学家合作举办神经阻滞互动研讨会,结合大体解剖复习和动手扫描的跨学科方法受到了急诊科教师和住院医师的欢迎和青睐。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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