• Can J Anaesth · Jan 2021

    Development of a critical care ultrasound curriculum using a mixed-methods needs assessment and engagement of frontline healthcare professionals.

    • Brian M Buchanan, Peter G Brindley, Sean M Bagshaw, Aws Alherbish, and Vijay J Daniels.
    • Department of Critical Care Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada. bmb@ualberta.ca.
    • Can J Anaesth. 2021 Jan 1; 68 (1): 718071-80.

    PurposeExperts recommend that critical care medicine (CCM) practitioners should be adept at critical care ultrasound (CCUS). Published surveys highlight that many institutions have no deliberate strategy, no formalized curriculum, and insufficient engagement of CCM faculty and trainees. Consequently, proficiency is non-uniform. Accordingly, we performed a needs assessment to develop an inter-professional standardized CCUS curriculum as a foundation towards universal basic fluency.MethodsMixed-methods study of CCM trainees, attendings, and nurse practitioners working across five academic and community medical-surgical intensive care units in Edmonton, Alberta. We used qualitative focus groups followed by quantitative surveys to explore, refine, and integrate results into a curriculum framework.ResultsFocus groups with 19 inter-professional practitioners identified major themes including perceived benefits, learning limitations, priorities, perceived risks, characteristics of effective instruction, ensuring long-term success, and achieving competency. Sub-themes highlighted rapid attrition of skill following one- to two-day workshops, lack of skilled faculty, lack of longitudinal training, and the need for site-based mentorship. Thirty-five practitioners (35/70: 50%) completed the survey. Prior training included workshops (16/35; 46%) and self-teaching (11/35; 31%). Eleven percent (4/35) described concerns about potential errors in CCUS performance. The survey helped to refine resources, content, delivery, and assessment. Integration of qualitative and quantitative findings produced a comprehensive curriculum framework.ConclusionBuilding on published recommendations, our needs assessment identified additional priorities for a CCUS curriculum framework. Specifically, there is a perceived loss of skills following short workshops and insufficient strategies to sustain learning. Addressing these deficits could narrow the gap between national recommendations and frontline needs.

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