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Emergency Ultrasound Fellowship Training
Author(s) -
Adhikari Srikar,
Fiorello Albert
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1550-9613
pISSN - 0278-4297
DOI - 10.7863/ultra.33.10.1821
Subject(s) - credentialing , medicine , checklist , documentation , quality assurance , medical education , emergency ultrasound , emergency department , revenue , audit , medical emergency , nursing , management , psychology , external quality assessment , accounting , pathology , cognitive psychology , computer science , economics , business , programming language
Objectives To describe our experience with implementation of a novel team‐based emergency ultrasound (EUS) fellowship training program. Methods We conducted a retrospective review at an academic medical center. All emergency department (ED) faculty and residents were divided into 3 teams, and a fellow was assigned to each team. Each fellow was responsible for ultrasound (US) education of their team members and faculty credentialing. Additionally, each fellow was assigned to one of these specific responsibilities every month: (1) education, (2) quality assurance/billing, and (3) equipment. The fellows also received a checklist at the beginning of the fellowship training, which outlined research, reading, teaching, and scanning requirements. Results With a team‐based approach, all US examinations were reviewed for quality control within 1 week after the scans were performed. The number of US examinations billed by faculty increased by 180%. The US billing revenue increased by 60% during the study period. Fifteen additional faculty members were credentialed to use US in the ED. Compliance with bedside documentation of US findings increased from 30% to 90%. There was increased resident engagement, and the number of scans performed by residents increased by 130%. There was also a substantial decrease in the funds required to replace damaged transducers. Conclusions A team‐based EUS fellowship training program had a substantial impact on US use in the ED, quality control review, faculty credentialing, US billing revenue, compliance with documentation, and resident US education.