Aligning emergency care with global health priorities

Abstract Background The availability of resources, knowledge, and will to expand access to high-quality emergency care in low- and middle-income countries has made strong progress in recent years. While the possibility for intervention has improved, the need has only grown more pressing. What remain...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas Shanahan, Nicholas Risko, Junaid Razzak, Zulfiqar Bhutta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:International Journal of Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12245-018-0213-8
id doaj-5f1cd91244a4426d816be00aee5b60dd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5f1cd91244a4426d816be00aee5b60dd2020-11-25T02:40:32ZengBMCInternational Journal of Emergency Medicine1865-13721865-13802018-11-011111410.1186/s12245-018-0213-8Aligning emergency care with global health prioritiesThomas Shanahan0Nicholas Risko1Junaid Razzak2Zulfiqar Bhutta3Thomas Shanahan, University of LeedsDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of MedicineDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of MedicineAga Khan UniversityAbstract Background The availability of resources, knowledge, and will to expand access to high-quality emergency care in low- and middle-income countries has made strong progress in recent years. While the possibility for intervention has improved, the need has only grown more pressing. What remains is for us, the people who practice and support emergency care delivery on a regular basis, to pull these elements together and present a cohesive call to action for leaders to prioritize the development of emergency care. This advocacy should coalesce around two high-level commitments: the Sustainable Development Goals and Universal Health Coverage. Emergency care has not been a traditional tool that policy makers rely on to improve health and development; however, we can show that it is actually critical to achieving these goals. Making this case has become possible with the availability of evidence that shows emergency health conditions contribute to a substantial portion of the disease burden, emergency care interventions are high-impact, and the interventions can be implemented without a substantial increase in resources. Main body There is a growing understanding of the burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries and how 54% or 24.3 million deaths are amenable to emergency care systems. There are a group of diseases that are time sensitive and show improved outcomes with good emergency care systems. Alongside an improving scientific underpinning to emergency care, there is growing policy recognition. While there is no direct mention of emergency care in the Sustainable Development Goals document, many goals, such as reductions in infant and maternal deaths, deaths due to non-communicable diseases, road traffic injuries and violence, improving resilience of climate change, universal coverage, and safe/sustainable urban environments are not achievable without developing, sustaining, and improving the quality of emergency care systems. Conclusion To take emergency care to the next level, we must capitalize on the growing understanding of the disease burden of emergent conditions, along with the increasing evidence of the high-impact and low-cost of emergency care interventions. Linking these messages to widely accepted policy priorities like the SDGs and UHC will increase attention towards the development of emergency care systems, which potentially could save lives.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12245-018-0213-8Emergency careEmergency care systemsSustainable development goalsLow and middle-income countriesUniversal health coverageWorld health Assembly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Shanahan
Nicholas Risko
Junaid Razzak
Zulfiqar Bhutta
spellingShingle Thomas Shanahan
Nicholas Risko
Junaid Razzak
Zulfiqar Bhutta
Aligning emergency care with global health priorities
International Journal of Emergency Medicine
Emergency care
Emergency care systems
Sustainable development goals
Low and middle-income countries
Universal health coverage
World health Assembly
author_facet Thomas Shanahan
Nicholas Risko
Junaid Razzak
Zulfiqar Bhutta
author_sort Thomas Shanahan
title Aligning emergency care with global health priorities
title_short Aligning emergency care with global health priorities
title_full Aligning emergency care with global health priorities
title_fullStr Aligning emergency care with global health priorities
title_full_unstemmed Aligning emergency care with global health priorities
title_sort aligning emergency care with global health priorities
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 1865-1372
1865-1380
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Background The availability of resources, knowledge, and will to expand access to high-quality emergency care in low- and middle-income countries has made strong progress in recent years. While the possibility for intervention has improved, the need has only grown more pressing. What remains is for us, the people who practice and support emergency care delivery on a regular basis, to pull these elements together and present a cohesive call to action for leaders to prioritize the development of emergency care. This advocacy should coalesce around two high-level commitments: the Sustainable Development Goals and Universal Health Coverage. Emergency care has not been a traditional tool that policy makers rely on to improve health and development; however, we can show that it is actually critical to achieving these goals. Making this case has become possible with the availability of evidence that shows emergency health conditions contribute to a substantial portion of the disease burden, emergency care interventions are high-impact, and the interventions can be implemented without a substantial increase in resources. Main body There is a growing understanding of the burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries and how 54% or 24.3 million deaths are amenable to emergency care systems. There are a group of diseases that are time sensitive and show improved outcomes with good emergency care systems. Alongside an improving scientific underpinning to emergency care, there is growing policy recognition. While there is no direct mention of emergency care in the Sustainable Development Goals document, many goals, such as reductions in infant and maternal deaths, deaths due to non-communicable diseases, road traffic injuries and violence, improving resilience of climate change, universal coverage, and safe/sustainable urban environments are not achievable without developing, sustaining, and improving the quality of emergency care systems. Conclusion To take emergency care to the next level, we must capitalize on the growing understanding of the disease burden of emergent conditions, along with the increasing evidence of the high-impact and low-cost of emergency care interventions. Linking these messages to widely accepted policy priorities like the SDGs and UHC will increase attention towards the development of emergency care systems, which potentially could save lives.
topic Emergency care
Emergency care systems
Sustainable development goals
Low and middle-income countries
Universal health coverage
World health Assembly
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12245-018-0213-8
work_keys_str_mv AT thomasshanahan aligningemergencycarewithglobalhealthpriorities
AT nicholasrisko aligningemergencycarewithglobalhealthpriorities
AT junaidrazzak aligningemergencycarewithglobalhealthpriorities
AT zulfiqarbhutta aligningemergencycarewithglobalhealthpriorities
_version_ 1724780998491635712