Updating Results

University of Melbourne

  • 37% international / 63% domestic

Ultrasound Guided Peripheral Venous Access

  • Non-Award

This course enables healthcare professionals to perform ultrasound-guided peripheral venous cannulation, improving IV cannulation success rates and efficiency. It includes online learning and simulator practice at the University of Melbourne.

Key details

Degree Type
Non-Award
Duration
5 - 5 years full-time
Study Mode
Online
Domestic Fees
$825 total

About this course

Overview

Never miss an intravenous drip again after you have completed this course! After completing this self-directed online course you will be able to perform ultrasound guided peripheral venous cannulation, increasing the success rate of IV cannulation as well as reducing the time taken.

Students also get the opportunity to practice their skills on a simulator at our facilities at the University of Melbourne Ultrasound Simulation Centre between 8 am - 4 pm Monday to Thursday.

Study locations

Online

What you will learn

Overview

Never miss an intravenous drip again after you have completed this course! After completing this self-directed online course you will be able to perform ultrasound guided peripheral venous cannulation, increasing the success rate of IV cannulation as well as reducing the time taken.

Students also get the opportunity to practice their skills on a simulator at our facilities at the University of Melbourne Ultrasound Simulation Centre between 8 am - 4 pm Monday to Thursday.

Designed For

Suitable for all health care workers who perform peripheral intravenous cannulation, PICC line insertion or venous blood sampling (phlebotomy). For example doctors, nurses, medical and nursing students, paramedics, phlebotomist (pathology services).

Accreditation

This is a CPD Australia-approved course.

Learning Outcomes

  1. Use ultrasound to discriminate arteries and veins
  2. Use ultrasound to identify the best vein to cannulate
  3. Use ultrasound to successfully guide a cannula into the vein
  4. Use ultrasound to correct cannula misfeed

Course structure

Course Units

The course is delivered in two components:

  • Online Course Tutorials
    • Tutorial 1: How to perform ultrasound-guided peripheral venous access
    • Tutorial 2: Performing the Simulator Case Studies
    • Tutorial 3: Completing the course and the next steps
  • Simulator practice. A blue gel block and human arm simulators and ultrasound machines are available to complete the required practice (2 successful cannulations)
Time RequiredSelf-Directed Online Reading2.5 hoursPractical self-directed training on simulators*2 hoursEnd of course MCQ test0.5 hoursTotal5 hours

*participants will have access to Vimedix simulators in the University of Melbourne Ultrasound Simulation Centre upon successful course enrolment.

Graduate outcomes

Graduate satisfaction and employment outcomes for Medicine courses at University of Melbourne.
80.2%
Overall satisfaction
80.2%
Skill scale
69.2%
Teaching scale
41.4%
Employed full-time