It is hard to imagine a modern hospital ward without a mobile ultrasound, bedside (point-of-care) sonography (POCUS) is a technique of the 21st century, which in emergency medicine settings (for… Click to show full abstract
It is hard to imagine a modern hospital ward without a mobile ultrasound, bedside (point-of-care) sonography (POCUS) is a technique of the 21st century, which in emergency medicine settings (for example during primary survey) might replace the stethoscope at times. In emergency medicine - which is the hospital discipline closest to primary care - bedside ultrasound is part of the routine care by now, and its use is based on evidences of thorough research. Given that the emergency outpatient population is getting closer to primary care patients both in presentation and demography, we believe that the current POCUS evidences are probably applicable to primary care as well. Based on the clinical experience gained in emergency medicine, we assume that bedside ultrasound may also be helpful in general practice reliably diagnosing certain, potentially life-threatening pathologies, reducing the length of time until definitive treatment, increasing the success rate of certain interventions, improving patients' experience, and potentially alleviating staff burnout. The present article summarizes experiences with bedside sonography in the Anglo-Saxon world and tries to find its place in the Hungarian primary care. The widespread use of bedside ultrasound, however, in the Hungarian general practice is still lagging due to numerous barriers, the most pressing of those are training, legal responsibility and financing. Regardless, we believe, that even in this early, unregulated phase, it is worth considering to introduce bedside ultrasound into daily primary care. Competent use, however, requires continuous practice; based on the average adult patient turnover in an urban Hungarian "adult only" surgery, it might take six months to gain the necessary skills to provide high level, safe patient care. Orv Hetil. 2022; 163(52): 2067-2071.
               
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