domenica 4 agosto 2013

ISTRUTTORE A DISTANZA PER IL 118?

Ho sentito parlare a lungo dell'applicazione dell'ecografia FAST sul territorio ma ho sempre espresso riserve in quanto, secondo me e per la mia esperienza di emergenza territoriale e ospedaliera, non sono in numero sufficiente i "mentori" che hanno reali abilità ed esperienza  sulla strada. Un conto è imparare in una sala chiusa un conto è l'esecuzione con la confusione, con il sole a picco o la pioggia, un conto è darsi una tempistica per l'esecuzione mentre un altro è lasciarsi trasportare dall'esame e farlo durare ben oltre una decina di minuti...(passano più velocemente di quanto si possa pensare)
Questa potrebbe essere una soluzione ed è la naturale continuazione del post precedente.

 2012 Dec;18(10):807-9. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2012.0038. Epub 2012 Oct 26.

Just-in-time cost-effective off-the-shelf remote telementoring of paramedical personnel in bedside lung sonography-a technical case study.

Source

Regional Trauma Services, Foothills Medical Centre, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Abstract

PURPOSE:

Remote telementored ultrasound (RTMUS) is a new discipline that allows a remote expert to guide variably experienced clinical responders through focused ultrasound examinations. We used the examination of the pleural spaces after tube thoracostomy (TT) removal by anurse with no prior ultrasound experience as an illustrative but highly accurate example of the technique using a simple cost-effective system.

MATERIALS AND METHODS:

The image outputs of a handheld ultrasound machine and a head-mounted Web camera were input into a customized graphical user interface and streamed over a freely available voice over Internet protocol system that allowed two-way audio and visual communication between the novice examiner and the remote expert. The bedside nurse was then guided to examine the anterior chest of a patient who had recently had bilateral TTs removed. The team sought to determine the presence or absence of any recurrent pneumothoraces using the standard criteria for theultrasound diagnosis of post-removal pneumothorax (PTXs). An upright chest radiograph (CXR) was obtained immediately after the RTMUS examination.

RESULTS:

The RTMUS system enabled the novice user to learn how to hold the ultrasound probe, where to place it on the chest, and thereafter to diagnose a subtle unilateral PTX characterized as "tiny" on the subsequent formal CXR report.

CONCLUSIONS:

As ultrasound has almost limitless clinical utility, using simple but advanced informatics and communication technologies has potential to improve worldwide healthcare delivery. RTMUS could be used both to enhance the information content as well as to digitally document important physiologic findings in any clinical encounter wherever a portable ultrasound and Internet connectivity are available.

PMID:
 
23101484
 
[PubMed - in process]

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