학술논문

Research Priorities for Data Collection and Management Within Global Acute and Emergency Care Systems
Document Type
article
Source
Academic Emergency Medicine. 20(12)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Services
Clinical Research
Emergency Care
Health and social care services research
8.1 Organisation and delivery of services
Generic health relevance
Good Health and Well Being
Data Collection
Emergency Medical Services
Emergency Medicine
Global Health
Health Services Research
Humans
Research
Public Health and Health Services
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Barriers to global emergency care development include a critical lack of data in several areas, including limited documentation of the acute disease burden, lack of agreement on essential components of acute care systems, and a lack of consensus on key analytic elements, such as diagnostic classification schemes and regionally appropriate metrics for impact evaluation. These data gaps obscure the profound health effects of lack of emergency care access in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). As part of the Academic Emergency Medicine consensus conference "Global Health and Emergency Care: A Research Agenda," a breakout group sought to develop a priority research agenda for data collection and management within global emergency care systems.