The efficacy of an anatomy and ultrasonography workshop on improving residents’ confidence and knowledge in regional anesthesia

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Abstract

Background: Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia (UGRA) has become the standard for regional anesthesia practice, but there is not a standardized educational approach for training residents. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of an UGRA workshop utilizing the theoretical framework of embodied cognition for anesthesiology residents. Methods: A workshop was developed consisting of didactics, scanning training on standardized patients (SPs) and anatomy reviews on prosected cadavers that focused on the most common UGRA procedures for the upper and lower extremity. At the beginning of the workshop and at the end of the workshop residents completed pre-test and pre-confidence surveys, as well as post-test and post-confidence surveys, respectively to assess the impact of the workshop. Results: 39 residents (100% of the possible residents) participated in the workshop in 2019. Residents’ confidence in identifying relevant anatomy for the most common UGRA procedures significantly increased in 13 of the 14 measurements. Residents’ knowledge gain was also statistically significant from the pre-test to post-test (20.13 ± 3.61 and 26.13 ± 2.34; p

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Harmon, D. J., Boscardin, C. K., Cohen, N. H., & Braehler, M. R. (2023). The efficacy of an anatomy and ultrasonography workshop on improving residents’ confidence and knowledge in regional anesthesia. BMC Medical Education, 23(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04653-y

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