Category Archives: General

Learning bedside ultrasound – Time and practice

If you are medical student, this is easy as everyone assumes you are learning all the time and you don’t have all the answers. Take every opportunity to grab the machine and practice on patients, volunteers, your friends etc.  Practice at lunchtime, before work, after work. I guarantee you, the portable machine will be available most of the time. Start with the easy stuff then, when you are comfortable with that, move on. Practice, practice, practice, day in, day out. It all adds up in the end.

If you are a qualified physician, it’s a tad more difficult. Patients might expect you to give them answers. Explain that you are still learning and adopt the attitude that although it might give you positive useful information, but it also might not. In the grand scheme of things, no opportunity to learn is ever wasted.

 

Learning bedside ultrasound – Good learning resources

Start by finding a hands-on course or organize an elective or fellowship. No one learns to drive a car by reading a book, listening to didactic lectures or watching YouTube videos. Getting your hands on the probe early with a trainer next to you on a real human subject will orientate you to probe handling and hand-eye-screen coordination. This will give you a basic grounding.

Next find a good book or online resource with videos starting with the basics and building up. Aim to practice regularly what you are learning from reading and watching the videos on real subjects.

Why is learning ultrasound so hard?

First the bad news. It takes two years to train a new ultrasound technologist. The learning curve is long and shallow. The hand-eye-screen coordination takes a while to get used to. The machine controls have unfamiliar names and the terminology used to describe things is different.

And the good news? Given enough time and practice, good learning resources and timely quality feedback, pretty much anyone can learn to do it. The question is, are you willing to invest in your future, suffer now and gain the rewards later?

“The best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago. The second best time is now”

Ancient Chinese proverb

 

Why should I learn to do bedside ultrasound?

We live in exciting times. We know ultrasound imaging provides valuable clinical information. It was the case that the machines were large, expensive, and difficult to use. They were also kept in the radiology department under lock and key. But technology moves fast. Now the machines are small, portable, user-friendly and much less expensive which means ultrasound is available to anyone who is willing to take the time and learn how to use it. And if you can use it, it can help narrow down your differential diagnosis; it can help you manage the patient, not in the morning, not the next day, but now. Bedside or point of care ultrasound is joining forces with clinical history taking and examination. In the near future, as the technology shrinks further, we might see an ultrasound unit in the pocket of every clinician right along side their stethoscope.

What is FiGBUS?

Hello Everyone! FiGBUS stands for Field Guide to Bedside Ultrasound and you guessed it, we’re all about promoting bedside ultrasound in the field of medicine. We are a radiologist and an ultrasound technologist based in Northern British Columbia, Canada and our aim is to help medical students and physicians get started with bedside or point of care ultrasound. Through this blog, our goal is to curate some of the best online resources out there for ultrasound beginners as well as provide tips and tricks of our own. In time, we hope to build a community of similar minded clinicians who love using bedside ultrasound to help improve their clinical skills. Check back here for regular posts and if you like us, subscribe to this blog via email.