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      A model for teaching bedside detection of glass in wounds.

      Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ
      Animals, Attitude of Health Personnel, Chickens, Disease Models, Animal, Educational Measurement, Emergency Medicine, education, Fluoroscopy, methods, Foreign Bodies, radiography, Glass, Humans, Point-of-Care Systems, Prospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Wounds, Penetrating

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          Abstract

          Emergency physicians often manage wounds contaminated with glass. Even when glass is visible on x rays, removal may require real-time bedside imaging. To assess whether novices can be easily trained to accurately detect tiny glass foreign bodies (GFBs) using low-power portable fluoroscopy. 21 medical students with no prior experience using fluoroscopy were taught to detect 1 mm GFBs in chicken legs either by training over three separate days or by training on 1 day. Skills were reassessed at 3 months. The number of mean correct responses was compared between groups using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and by examination of 95% CIs. Examination of CI overlap and ANOVA suggested that asymptotic accuracy was achieved after 15-30 training specimens. The final accuracy was similar between protocols, was comparable to prior accuracy reports of plain film radiography and was maintained in both protocols at the 3 month follow-up: 10.9 (0.3) and 12.0 (0.8; out of 15). Novices can easily be taught to detect GFBs using fluoroscopy, with accuracy comparable to that achieved by radiologists using plain films. Further studies are needed to assess doctors' use of the technique in real patients.

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