Global Health and Emergency Care: A Resuscitation Research Agenda—Part 2 |
| |
Authors: | Marcus Eng Hock Ong MBBS MPH Tom P. Aufderheide MD MS Graham Nichol MD MPH FRCP Bentley J. Bobrow MD Leo Bossaert MD Peter Cameron MBBS MD Judith Finn PhD RN RM ICCert FRCNA Ian Jacobs PhD FRCNA Rudolph W. Koster MD PhD Bryan McNally MD MPH Yih Yng Ng MBBS MPH MBA Sang Do Shin MD MPH PhD George Sopko MD MPH Hideharu Tanaka MD PhD Taku Iwami MD PhD Mark Hauswald MD |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. The Department of Emergency Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, , Singapore;2. The Office of Clinical Sciences, Duke‐NUS Graduate Medical School, , Singapore;3. The Department of Emergency Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, , Milwaukee, WI;4. The University of Washington‐Harborview Center for Prehospital Emergency Care, University of Washington, , Seattle, WA;5. The Department of Emergency Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Arizona, Phoenix Campus, , Phoenix, AZ;6. The Bureau of EMS & Trauma System, Arizona Department of Health Services, , Phoenix, AZ;7. The Department of Intensive Care, University of Antwerp, , Antwerp, Belgium;8. The Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, , Melbourne, Australia;9. Pre‐Hospital, Resuscitation and Emergency Care Research Unit, Faculty of Health Sciences, Curtin University, , Perth, Western Australia;10. The School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, , Melbourne, Australia;11. The Department of Cardiology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, , Amsterdam, Netherlands;12. The Department of Emergency Medicine, Emory University, , Atlanta, GA;13. The Department of Emergency Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, , Seoul, Republic of Korea;14. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, , Bethesda, MD;15. The Department of Sport and Medical Science, Kokushikan University, , Tokyo, Japan;16. The Department of Preventive Services, Kyoto University Health Service, , Kyoto, Japan |
| |
Abstract: | At the 2013 Academic Emergency Medicine global health consensus conference, a breakout session to develop a research agenda for resuscitation was held. Two articles are the result of that discussion. This second article addresses data collection, management, and analysis and regionalization of postresuscitation care, resuscitation programs, and research examples around the world and proposes a strategy to strengthen resuscitation research globally. There is a need for reliable global statistics on resuscitation, international standardization of data, and development of an electronic standard for reporting data. Regionalization of postresuscitation care is a priority area for future research. Large resuscitation clinical research networks are feasible and can give valuable data for improvement of service and outcomes. Low‐cost models of population‐based research, and emphasis on interventional and implementation studies that assess the clinical effects of programs and interventions, are needed to determine the most cost‐effective strategies to improve outcomes. The global challenge is how to adapt research findings to a developing world situation to have an effect internationally. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|