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Knowledge Translation in International Emergency Medical Care
Authors:L. Kristian Arnold MD  MPH  Hisham Alomran MD  MPH  V. Anantharaman MBBS  FRCP   FRCS Ed   FAMS  Pinchas Halpern MD  Mark Hauswald MD  Pia Malmquist MBBS  FRCP  FRCPCH  FCEM  OBE  Elizabeth Molyneux MRCPCH  FFAEM  Bishan Rajapakse MBChB  Megan Ranney MD  Junaid Razzak MD  PhD  MPH
Affiliation:From ArLac Health Services, Lexington, MA;Emergency Medicine, King Faisal Hospital, Riyaad, Saudi Arabia;Emergency Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore;Emergency Medicine, Tel Aviv University Hospital, Tel Aviv, Israel;Emergency Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM;Department of Emergency Medicine, South Stockholm General Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden;Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi;South Asian Clinical Toxicology Research Collaboration (SACTRC), Kandy, Sri Lanka;Emergency Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI;Section of Emergency Medicine, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan
Abstract:More than 90% of the world population receives emergency medical care from different types of practitioners with little or no specific training in the field and with variable guidance and oversight. Emergency medical care is being recognized by actively practicing physicians around the world as an increasingly important domain in the overall health services package for a community. The know-do gap is well recognized as a major impediment to high-quality health care in much of the world. Knowledge translation principles for application in this highly varied young domain will require investigation of numerous aspects of the knowledge synthesis, exchange, and application domains in order to bring the greatest benefit of both explicit and tacit knowledge to increasing numbers of the world's population. This article reviews some of the issues particular to knowledge development and transfer in the international domain. The authors present a set of research proposals developed from a several-month online discussion among practitioners and teachers of emergency medical care in 16 countries from around the globe and from all economic strata, aimed at improving the flow of knowledge from developers and repositories of knowledge to the front lines of clinical care.
Keywords:developing countries    diffusion of innovation    evidence-based medicine    health policy information    dissemination    knowledge
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