• Acad Emerg Med · Nov 2021

    Review

    Global Emergency Medicine: A Scoping Review of the Literature from 2020.

    • Indi Trehan, Sean M Kivlehan, Kamna S Balhara, Joseph Bonney, Braden J Hexom, Amelia Y Pousson, Nana S A Quao, Megan M Rybarczyk, Anand Selvam, Benjamin D Nicholson, Nidhi Bhaskar, Torben K Becker, and theGlobal Emergency Medicine Literature Review (GEMLR) Group.
    • Departments of Pediatrics, Global Health, and Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
    • Acad Emerg Med. 2021 Nov 1; 28 (11): 1328-1340.

    ObjectiveThe objective was to identify, screen, highlight, review, and summarize some of the most rigorously conducted and impactful original research (OR) and review articles (RE) in global emergency medicine (EM) published in 2020 in the peer-reviewed and gray literature.MethodsA broad systematic search of peer-reviewed publications related to global EM indexed on PubMed and in the gray literature was conducted. The titles and abstracts of the articles on this list were screened by members of the Global Emergency Medicine Literature Review (GEMLR) Group to identify those that met our criteria of OR or RE in the domains of disaster and humanitarian response (DHR), emergency care in resource-limited settings (ECRLS), and EM development. Those articles that met these screening criteria were then scored using one of three scoring templates appropriate to the article type. Those articles that scored in the top 5% then underwent in-depth narrative summarization.ResultsThe 2020 GEMLR search initially identified 35,970 articles, more than 50% more than last year's search. From these, 364 were scored based on their full text. Nearly three-fourths of the scored articles constituted OR, of which nearly three-fourths employed quantitative research methods. Nearly 10% of the articles identified this year were directly related to COVID-19. Research involving ECRLS again constituted most of the articles in this year's review, accounting for more than 60% of the literature scored. A total of 20 articles underwent in-depth narrative critiques.ConclusionsThe number of studies relevant to global EM identified by our search was very similar to that of last year. Revisions to our methodology to identify a broader range of research were successful in identifying more qualitative research and studies related to DHR. The number of COVID-19-related articles is likely to continue to increase in subsequent years.© 2021 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

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