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Point‐of‐care ultrasound in rural New Zealand: Safety, quality and impact on patient management
Author(s) -
Nixon Garry,
Blattner Katharina,
KorohekeRogers Marara,
Muirhead Jillian,
Finnie Wendy L.,
Lawrenson Ross,
Kerse Ngaire
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
australian journal of rural health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.48
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1440-1584
pISSN - 1038-5282
DOI - 10.1111/ajr.12472
Subject(s) - medicine , credentialing , context (archaeology) , quality assurance , medical emergency , nursing , external quality assessment , pathology , biology , paleontology
Objective To evaluate the safety, quality and impact of point‐of‐care ultrasound on patient management when performed by rural generalist doctors. Design Cross‐sectional descriptive study. Setting Six rural small hospitals serving a range of communities in rural New Zealand. Participants All generalist doctors practising ultrasound in the study hospitals. Main outcome measures Technical quality, accuracy, impact on diagnostic certainty, patient disposition and overall patient care. Result Participants correctly interpreted 90% of images and a similar percentage of point‐of‐care ultrasound findings when compared with the results of formal imaging or the final diagnosis. In total, 87% of scans contributed to the diagnostic process, changing the diagnostic probability. There was a 4% overall reduction in the number of patients needing hospital admission or transfer to an urban base hospital. The overall impact on patient care was positive for 71% of point‐of‐care ultrasound scans. Three percent of scans had the potential for patient harm. Conclusion Rural generalists’ practise a broad scope of point‐of‐care ultrasound that, when used as a part of the full clinical assessment, has a positive impact on patient care, improving diagnostic certainty and reducing the need for hospital admission and inter‐hospital transfer. There are challenges in learning and maintaining the skills needed to practise a high standard of point‐of‐care ultrasound in this context. Further consideration needs to be given to the development safe scopes of practice, training, credentialing and quality assurance.