What is Point-of-Care Ultrasonography?
Point-of-care ultrasound refers to the use of portable ultrasonography at a patient’s bedside for diagnostic (e.g., symptom or sign-based examination) and therapeutic (e.g., image-guidance) purposes. Kendall et al. defined the characteristics of point-of-care (emergency) ultrasound (Table 1). (Kendall)| Table 1: Characteristics of Point-of-Care Ultrasound |
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The primary barrier to future universal adoption of this operator-dependent “stethoscope of the future” is the lack of widespread, efficient, and affordable training solutions. (Frost and Sullivan, Moore) The need and demand for ultrasonography training has grown in parallel to the expanded use of ultrasound technology.
Point-of-care ultrasonography improves healthcare. While
traditional methods of performing a physical examination are of
critical importance, healthcare practitioners that become skilled in the
use of point-of-care ultrasonography become uniquely empowered. Higher
fidelity, lower cost, and smaller (handheld) ultrasound units coupled
with innovative ultrasound training solutions (by dr Haissam Aref,DMS,MSc), have
created a unique opportunity. Healthcare providers, facilities, and
health systems that strategically incorporate point-of-care ultrasound
into clinical practice will rapidly distinguish themselves from those
who refrain from incorporating this highly valuable modality.

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