With more than 900,000 confirmed cases worldwide and nearly 50,000 deaths during the first 3 months of 2020, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has emerged as an unprecedented health care crisis. The spread of COVID-19 has been heterogeneous, resulting in some regions having sporadic transmission and relatively few hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and others having community transmission that has led to overwhelming numbers of severe
Point-of-care ultrasonography is increasingly being used to facilitate accurate and timely diagnoses and to guide procedures. It is important for pediatric emergency physicians caring for patients in the emergency department to receive adequate and continued point-of-care ultrasonography training for those indications used in their practice setting. Emergency departments should have credentialing and quality assurance programs. Pediatric emergency medicine fellowships should provide appropriate training to physician trainees. Hospitals should provide privileges to physicians who demonstrate competency in point-of-care ultrasonography. Ongoing research will provide the necessary measures to define the optimal training and competency assessment standards. Requirements for credentialing and hospital privileges will vary and will be specific to individual departments and hospitals. As more physicians are trained and more research is completed, there should be one national standard for credentialing and privileging in point-of-care ultrasonography for pediatric emergency physicians.
T he coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is the largest public health crisis in over a century. 1 As of Jan. 15, 2021, COVID-19 has resulted in over 113 million infections and almost 2.5 million deaths globally. 2 The global crude mortality rate among patients diagnosed with COVID-19 is about 3%, but some countries have reported rates that are up to 3 times higher. 2,3 Factors explaining these variations include population differences in demographics, health status and socioeconomics, as well as system factors such as the availability of testing, pandemic preparedness and response, with others yet to be uncovered. 4,5 There is an urgent need for high-quality, populationlevel data to understand modifiable risks for disease severity
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