4.1 Article

Point of Care Ultrasound in Pediatric Surgery across the European Region-European Pediatric Surgery Association Endorsed Survey

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GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/a-2185-8963

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point of care ultrasound; clinician ultrasound pediatric surgery; EUPSA survey ultrasound; pediatric surgery ultrasound

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The study revealed varying degrees of POCUS use in pediatric surgery across Europe, with most initial ultrasounds for acute admissions performed by radiologists. Training in POCUS is informal for over half of participants, and the main barriers to its use are identified as a lack of training opportunities and portable ultrasound machines.
Introduction: Our purpose was to assess the state of training, clinical practice, and barriers to use point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) in pediatric surgery in Europe.Methods: An electronic survey was disseminated among European pediatric surgeons utilizing the European Pediatric Surgery Association network and other existing networks.Results: There were 186 respondents from 27 European countries and 7 non-European countries. In most countries (86.6%; N = 161), the initial ultrasound for acute admissions is performed by radiologists, with 1 to 6 hours turnover in 62.9% (N = 117) of urgent cases. Ultrasound by pediatric surgeons (point-of-care ultrasound/POCUS) is performed by 48.4% (N = 90) of respondents, with 29% (N = 54) using it at least once per week. The most common indications for POCUS include abdominal focused abdominal sonography in trauma (53.8%; N = 100), diagnosis of appendicitis (41.9%; N = 78), and intussusception (44.6%; N = 84). In malrotation-volvulus, 28.5% (N = 53) used ultrasound for its diagnosis, while 27.5% (N = 51) would not see an indication here. Training in POCUS occurred informally for 55.4% (N = 103) of participants, while 31.2% (N = 58) attended formal training courses. Almost all respondents wanted to attain further POCUS training (89.3%; N = 166), only 7% (N = 13) did not think this would be useful. For 73.1% (N = 136), POCUS is not currently part of the pediatric surgery training curriculum in their country. Perceived barriers to POCUS use include a lack of training opportunities (26.3% [N = 49]) and a paucity of portable ultrasound machines (17.8% [N = 33]).Conclusion: There is a wide spectrum of POCUS use in pediatric surgery across Europe. For those surgeons who practice POCUS, it is most used for the diagnosis of abdominal conditions. There are differing views among clinicians concerning the most useful applications of POCUS. The extent to which ultrasound is taught during pediatric surgery training differs substantially across European curricula.

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