Ultrasound virtual skills based workshop: An African experience in the COVID era

超声虚拟技能工作坊:新冠疫情时代的非洲经验

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Abstract

Telemedicine has emerged as a valuable tool for medical training, now more than ever. It involves exchanging healthcare or healthcare information digitally across large distances. This form of teaching has become more common due to significant advances in communication technology and increased access to the internet at more affordable costs. Isolated and poorly staffed areas are now able to access specialist review, mentorship, educational materials, and general support more efficiently than before. Typically, telemedicine is used to deliver didactic sessions and lectures and not skill sharing or training exercises. While ultrasonography is a skill typically taught at the bedside, we face a global pandemic where patient safety and standard operating procedures are prohibitive of this teaching model. Our team sought to have a practical session to determine whether practical skills can be taught through virtual training workshops as a way to mitigate these constraints. Practical stations were set up, with each station hosting an independent skill. The aim of the session was to introduce the topics to learners, to have learners visualize how the scans can be done with local setup and lastly perform these scans on volunteers to the satisfaction of the supervisors. Skills such as performing ocular ultrasound, gallbladder evaluation, and aortic aneurysm assessment were carried out on volunteers under a virtual supervisor's direction at all stations. The topics were chosen based on a previous needs assessment, and participants reported great satisfaction from the session. Ultrasound provides an excellent opportunity for virtual skill-based training, mentorship and trainee support. This commentary is directed at mostly low resource African countries with nascent Emergency Medicine programs. It also applies to organizations that support remote ultrasound skills training for emergency care providers and those that run emergency care outreach programs. These principles may also apply for other lower resource settings outside of Africa.

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