Journal of Foot and Ankle Research (Jul 2018)

Effectiveness of a multicenter training programme to teach point-of-care vascular ultrasound for the detection of peripheral arterial disease in people with diabetes

  • Pasha Normahani,
  • Rishi Agrawal,
  • Vasilliki Bravis,
  • Agnieszka Falinska,
  • Linda Bloomfield,
  • Zaheer Mehar,
  • Dawn Gaulton,
  • Alex Sangster,
  • Tracey Arkle,
  • Corinna Gomm,
  • Mohamed Aslam,
  • Nigel J. Standfield,
  • Usman Jaffer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13047-018-0283-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a training programme to teach a focused bedside ultrasound scan (PAD-scan; Podiatry Ankle Duplex Scan) for the detection of arterial disease in people with diabetes. Methods Five podiatrists and one diabetologist across two hospitals were enrolled in a structured training programme consisting of a training course (1-day), supervised scanning (5-weeks), independent scanning (3-weeks) and a final evaluation of performance (1-day). Time, technical skills (Duplex Ultrasound Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills tool (DUOSATS); minimum score = 6, maximum score = 26) and accuracy (level of agreement with vascular scientist PAD-scan assessment) were assessed for every supervised scan and again for the final evaluation of performance. Results A total of 90 PAD-scans in 65 patients were performed during the supervised phase. Participants demonstrated significant improvements in median time (19 min(IQR 13.9–25.5) vs 9.3 min (IQR 7.3–10.5) ; p = 0.028) and DUOSATS scores (17.5 (IQR 16.8–21) vs 25 (IQR 24–25.3); p = 0.027). At the final evaluation, participants completed scans in 5.4 min (IQR 5.3–5.9), achieved full DUOSAT scores and perfect agreement with the vascular scientist. Conclusion A structured training programme, integrated into diabetic foot clinics, was effective in teaching the PAD-scan

Keywords