全球急诊医学研究重点:绘图审查。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-09-16 DOI:10.1097/MEJ.0000000000001182
Erin Kim, Prashant Mahajan, Chris Barousse, Vijaya A Kumar, Shu-Ling Chong, Apoorva Belle, Dominik Roth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

确认急诊护理研究领域并确定其优先次序,对于提供证据和推进研究计划至关重要,其目的是提高个人和群体的健康水平。本综述旨在记录全球临床和非临床研究的优先事项。全球专家急诊医学教育与研究网络由横跨六大洲的 22 个站点组成,该网络对七个数据库中有关急诊医学研究重点的出版物(2000-2022 年)进行了绘图审查。我们纳入了采用可复制方法确定研究重点的研究,但不包括仅限于个别疾病的研究。三位审稿人分别独立筛选、选择研究成果,并将其归类为临床和非临床主题。不一致之处由一名独立研究人员解决并达成共识。结果测量和分析包括对临床和非临床主题研究重点的描述性分析、出版物的特点(包括作者名单中的国家代表)、目标受众(如研究人员或政策制定者)、参与者(如患者)以及确定重点的方法(如德尔菲法)。在经过筛选的 968 篇论文中,有 57 篇来自世界卫生组织所有地区。大多数论文(36 篇,占 63%)的作者只来自一个国家,主要是北美和欧洲。仅有 10 篇(18%)包含了患者代表。临床研究重点集中在复苏、心脏病学、中枢神经系统、紧急医疗服务、传染病、心理健康、呼吸系统疾病和创伤。在北美和欧洲分布广泛,但在非洲和亚洲则主要集中在传染病和复苏方面。11 个非临床主题包括:获得护理、卫生政策、筛查/分流、健康的社会决定因素、人员配置、技术/模拟、共同决策、跨部门合作、教育、以患者为中心的护理和研究网络。在欧洲和美洲,非临床主题非常广泛,在非洲则侧重于获得医疗服务和健康筛查,而在世界卫生组织的其他地区则大多没有。已发表的急诊医学优先研究课题各不相同,且受地域限制,大多由来自同一国家的作者共同完成。在确定全球研究重点方面,大多数出版物都来自西方国家,涵盖临床和非临床课题的广泛领域。非洲和亚洲的研究重点往往集中在这些地区更为普遍的特定问题上。
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Global emergency medicine research priorities: a mapping review.

Recognizing and prioritizing research areas in emergency care is crucial for generating evidence and advancing research programs, aiming to enhance health outcomes for both individuals and populations. The objective of this review is to document global clinical and nonclinical research priorities. The Emergency Medicine Education and Research by Global Experts network, consisting of 22 sites across six continents, conducted a mapping review of publications on emergency medicine research priorities (2000-2022) across seven databases. We included studies with replicable methodologies for determining research priorities, excluding those limited to individual diseases. Three reviewers independently screened, selected, and categorized results into clinical and nonclinical topics. Discrepancies were resolved by an independent investigator and consensus. Outcomes measures and analysis include descriptive analysis of research priorities grouped into clinical and nonclinical topics, characteristics of publications including countries represented in the author list, target audience (such as researchers or policy makers), participants (e.g. patients), and methods (e.g. Delphi) of priority setting. Among 968 screened papers, 57 publications from all WHO regions were included. Most (36, 63%) had authors from only a single country, primarily in North America and Europe. Patient representatives were included in only 10 (18%). Clinical research priorities clustered into resuscitation, cardiology, central nervous system, emergency medical services, infectious disease, mental health, respiratory disease, and trauma. Distribution was broad in North America and Europe but focused on infectious diseases and resuscitation in Africa and Asia. Eleven nonclinical topics included access to care, health policy, screening/triage, social determinants of health, staffing, technology/simulation, shared decision making, cross-sectoral collaboration, education, patient-centered care, and research networks. Nonclinical topics were broad in Europe and America, focused on access to care and health screening in Africa, and mostly absent in other WHO regions. Published research priorities in emergency medicine are heterogeneous and geographically limited, mostly containing groups of authors from the same country. The majority of publications in global research priority setting stem from Western countries, covering a broad spectrum of clinical and nonclinical topics. Research priorities from Africa and Asia tend to focus on specific issues more prevalent in those regions of the world.

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