Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: In Kenya, little data exists on point-ofcare ultrasound (POCUS) training and use for family medicine physicians. In 2017, a 3-day POCUS workshop assembled most of the family medicine physicians in Kenya. Through surveys, we assessed how this workshop could affect the level of POCUS use, skill, and confidence in family medicine practitioners in the long term. METHODS: Structured surveys, distributed before, after, and 10 months postworkshop assessed demographics, POCUS use, barriers, comfort, and skills based on attendee self-assessment. We compared data from the preworkshop surveys to postsurveys and post-postsurveys to assess immediate and long-term differences. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to evaluate continuous data, and significance was based on a P value of
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CITATION STYLE
Jones, L., Gathu, C., Szkwarko, D., Mucheru, S., Amin, N., Amisi, J. A., … Jayasekera, N. (2020). Expanding point-of-care ultrasound training in a low-and middleincome country: Experiences from a collaborative shorttraining workshop in Kenya. Family Medicine, 52(1), 38–42. https://doi.org/10.22454/FamMed.2020.986896
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