Third-year medical students' perceptions of confidence and readiness to perform EFAST after training.

BMC Med Educ

Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Sam Houston State University, 925 City Central Ave, Conroe, TX, 77304, USA.

Published: December 2024

Background: As Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) education is increasingly incorporated in undergraduate medical education (UME), evaluation of the effectiveness of various ultrasound-related curricula is a developing field. The Extended Focused Assessment with Sonography (EFAST) is a POCUS exam widely used in emergency medicine. This project examines third-year osteopathic medical (OMS III) students' perceptions of the impact of a focused introduction to EFAST training curriculum on their performance ability and utilization of EFAST during third-year clinical rotations. Furthermore, we assessed student perceptions of barriers to the use of POCUS during third-year clinical rotations.

Methods: The introduction to EFAST curriculum was developed using competency-based backward design and was delivered in July 2022 to incoming OMS III students. The curriculum involved didactics, hands-on ultrasound practice with standardized patients, and a comprehensive OSCE assessment, where students performed the EFAST exam. In July/August 2023, curriculum participants were anonymously surveyed regarding the effectiveness of the EFAST curriculum and perceived barriers to EFAST and POCUS utilization during their third-year clerkships. Descriptive and thematic analyses were performed on quantitative and qualitative data.

Results: Twenty-one of 69 (30.4%) participants responded to the survey, with 17 (24.6%) participants completing the entire survey. Respondents reported increased knowledge and confidence in performing and interpreting EFAST, with 82.4% indicating increased likelihood of performing EFAST and POCUS in general. 76.4% performed EFAST at least once during third-year clerkships, with 11.8% performing it 15 times or more. Students reported valuing the safe simulated learning environment of the EFAST training, and identified lack of patients with indications for EFAST, time constraints, lack of ultrasound machine availability and clinician comfort level as barriers to EFAST utilization.

Conclusions: This study presents the implementation of a focused EFAST curriculum developed through competency-based deliberate backward design based on professional guidelines and the anticipated educational needs of our institution and community. Student perceptions provided valuable insight into access and barriers to EFAST and POCUS use in subsequent clinical clerkships, indicating student perception of POCUS curriculum effectiveness may provide insight to continual curriculum improvement.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12909-024-06513-9DOI Listing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11657367PMC

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

efast
16
efast pocus
16
efast training
12
efast curriculum
12
barriers efast
12
students' perceptions
8
oms iii
8
introduction efast
8
curriculum
8
efast third-year
8

Similar Publications

Point-of-care abdominal ultrasound (US) has emerged as a powerful tool for clinicians and is becoming a routine bedside tool to rapidly diagnose, manage hemodynamics, monitor fluid status, and guide procedures in emergency and critical care. Extended focused assessment with sonography for trauma (eFAST), is commonly used to detect free intraperitoneal blood in the trauma setting and may also be an option in non-trauma patients. However, it has significant limitations for detecting gastrointestinal or retroperitoneal bleeding.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Third-year medical students' perceptions of confidence and readiness to perform EFAST after training.

BMC Med Educ

December 2024

Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Sam Houston State University, 925 City Central Ave, Conroe, TX, 77304, USA.

Background: As Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) education is increasingly incorporated in undergraduate medical education (UME), evaluation of the effectiveness of various ultrasound-related curricula is a developing field. The Extended Focused Assessment with Sonography (EFAST) is a POCUS exam widely used in emergency medicine. This project examines third-year osteopathic medical (OMS III) students' perceptions of the impact of a focused introduction to EFAST training curriculum on their performance ability and utilization of EFAST during third-year clinical rotations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Learning motivation is essential to obtain and maintain ultrasound competencies in emergency medicine. One's competencies herein and the need for ongoing training are best evaluated by self-assessment. This may be flawed by overconfidence effects - the belief to be better than others or better than tests reveal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The purpose of this work is to evaluate whether EFAST can also play a role in the hemodynamically stable polytrauma patient, without delaying his arrival in the CT-scan room.

Methods: In a period of seven month, 748 polytrauma patients were retrospective valued; we analyzed the findings of the CT exams of 485 haemodynamically stable patients for whom the EFAST investigation was not requested, highlighting the possible presence of findings that, if reported during the EFAST, could have changed the patient management.

Results: 52 hemodynamically stable patients with CT examination findings potentially detectable by ultrasound examination directly in the shock room, which represent a percentage of about 11% of all the hemodynamically stable patients analyzed; about 54% of CT findings are represented by the presence of pneumothorax.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sensitivity analyses are important components of physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model development and are required by regulatory agencies for PBPK submissions. They assess the impact of parametric uncertainty and variability on model estimates, aid model optimization by identifying parameters requiring calibration, and enable the testing of assumptions within PBPK models. One-at-a-time (OAT) sensitivity analyses quantify the impact on a model output in response to changes in a single parameter while holding others fixed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!