Clinical ultrasound in the literature

Time to add a fifth pillar to bedside clinical examination: inspection, palpation, percussion, auscultation and insonation.

The Journal of the American Medical Association
JAMA Cardiology

Ultraportable clinical ultrasound probes have the advantage of being personal: they are immediately available, either in your pocket or in every room of the department.

Dr Maxime Gautier
Head of the Simone Veil Hospital EMS Department - Eaubonne-Montmorency Hospital Group

When an imaging facility is not on site, point-of-care ultrasound is the only imaging modality that lends itself to true point-of-care service provision.

The Lancet

Portable, personal clinical ultrasound probes significantly improve patient care. They enable earlier, safer pre-diagnosis, and improve the relationship between professional and patient. On a hospital scale or, more generally, in terms of healthcare organization, they can also represent significant cost savings.

Dr Jérôme Bokobza
Emergency physician, Hôpitaux Universitaires Paris Centre -Cochin

POCUS gives doctors immediate access to clinical problems for faster, more direct management.

French Health Authority

The strengths of handheld devices result in several opportunities: ultrasound may be performed by a wider range of healthcare providers with varying levels and with different types of education. Handheld devices may also facilitate the use of ultrasound for teaching purposes.

European Federation of Societies for Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology

The most recent studies highlight the fact that clinical ultrasound must be part of the specialty's core competencies.

Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians

Portable devices can considerably reduce the overall time required for performing an ultrasound examination at the bedside.

European Society of Radiology

Physicians should examine the central veins with great precision by ultrasound to find the best vein for cannulation.

Electronic Physician

To compensate for a shortage of sonologists and sonographers in low-income countries, training midwives to undertake routine focused obstetric scanning for identification of high-risk pregnancies is a very viable option.

Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology

Point-of-Care ultrasound changes the management in specific groups of patients in the Emergency Department. It seems intuitive that POCUS holds an unexploited potential on a wide variety of patients.

The American Journal of Emergency Medicine

Bedside ultrasound is associated with improved patient satisfaction, perhaps as a consequence of improved time to diagnosis and decreased length of stay.

Journal of Emergency Medicine

Studies show that clinical ultrasound is associated with greater diagnostic accuracy.

Scandinavian Journal of Trauma

For patients with acute abdominal pain, bedside ultrasound examination is related to higher satisfaction and decreased short-term health care consumption.

British Medical Journal

The SFMU points out that the use of POCUS in an emergency setting is justified by its efficiency in terms of clinical and diagnostic response, and the ease with which skills can be acquired and maintained.

SFMU

Addition of ultra-sound imaging to the standard bedside physical examination has performed particularly better for correctly identifying the presence of less severe disease.

The Journal of the American Medical Association
JAMA Cardiology

Given that the biggest gap is in provision of diagnostics at the level of primary health care, which is also the entry point to the care cascade, we also recommend that, as a priority, a set of key point-of-care diagnostics (point-of-care tests and point-of-care ultrasound) be made available at all primary health-care centres.

The Lancet
Commission on diagnostics: transforming access to diagnostics

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