Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review

Introduction: Emergency medicine (EM) throughout Africa exists in various stages of development. The number and types of scientific EM literature can serve as a proxy indicator of EM regional development and activity. The goal of this scoping review is a preliminary assessment of potential size and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman, Julia Dixon, Taylor W. Burkholder, Nana Sefa, Hiren Patel, Anna Q. Yaffee, Amarachukwu Osisanya, Tolulope Oyewumi, Isaac Botchey, Jr., Maxwell Osei-Ampofo, Hendry Sawe, Jay Lemery, Tracy Cushing, Lee A. Wallis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-03-01
Series:African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X1830106X
id doaj-ab4be2e1c9f14ea89e3eea7de06fed9e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ab4be2e1c9f14ea89e3eea7de06fed9e2020-11-24T21:43:39ZengElsevierAfrican Journal of Emergency Medicine2211-419X2019-03-01914552Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping reviewNee-Kofi Mould-Millman0Julia Dixon1Taylor W. Burkholder2Nana Sefa3Hiren Patel4Anna Q. Yaffee5Amarachukwu Osisanya6Tolulope Oyewumi7Isaac Botchey, Jr.8Maxwell Osei-Ampofo9Hendry Sawe10Jay Lemery11Tracy Cushing12Lee A. Wallis13University of Colorado, School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA; Corresponding author.University of Colorado, School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Aurora, CO, USAUniversity of Southern California, Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, USABeaumont Health System, Royal Oak, MI, USAHarvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Emergency Medicine, MA, USAEmory University, Department of Emergency Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USAPiedmont Fayette Hospital, Fayetteville, GA, USAUniversity of Colorado, School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, Aurora, CO, USAJohns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USAKomfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Emergency Medicine Directorate, Kumasi, GhanaMuhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, Dar es Salaam, TanzaniaUniversity of Colorado, School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Aurora, CO, USAUniversity of Colorado, School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Aurora, CO, USAUniversity of Cape Town, Division of Emergency Medicine, Observatory, Cape Town, South AfricaIntroduction: Emergency medicine (EM) throughout Africa exists in various stages of development. The number and types of scientific EM literature can serve as a proxy indicator of EM regional development and activity. The goal of this scoping review is a preliminary assessment of potential size and scope of available African EM literature published over 15 years. Methods: We searched five indexed international databases as well as non-indexed grey literature from 1999-2014 using key search terms including “Africa”, “emergency medicine”, “emergency medical services”, and “disaster.” Two trained physician reviewers independently assessed whether each article met one or more of five inclusion criteria, and discordant results were adjudicated by a senior reviewer. Articles were categorised by subject and country of origin. Publication number per country was normalised by 1,000,000 population. Results: Of 6091 identified articles, 633 (10.4%) were included. African publications increased 10-fold from 1999 to 2013 (9 to 94 articles, respectively). Western Africa had the highest number (212, 33.5%) per region. South Africa had the largest number of articles per country (171, 27.0%) followed by Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana. 537 (84.8%) articles pertained to facility-based EM, 188 (29.7%) to out-of-hospital emergency medicine, and 109 (17.2%) to disaster medicine. Predominant content areas were epidemiology (374, 59.1%), EM systems (321, 50.7%) and clinical care (262, 41.4%). The most common study design was observational (479, 75.7%), with only 28 (4.4%) interventional studies. All-comers (382, 59.9%) and children (91, 14.1%) were the most commonly studied patient populations. Undifferentiated (313, 49.4%) and traumatic (180, 28.4%) complaints were most common. Conclusion: Our review revealed a considerable increase in the growth of African EM literature from 1999 to 2014. Overwhelmingly, articles were observational, studied all-comers, and focused on undifferentiated complaints. The articles discovered in this scoping review are reflective of the relatively immature and growing state of African EM. Keywords: Emergency medicine, EM, Emergency medical services, EMS, Africa, Scoping review, Literature reviewhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X1830106X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman
Julia Dixon
Taylor W. Burkholder
Nana Sefa
Hiren Patel
Anna Q. Yaffee
Amarachukwu Osisanya
Tolulope Oyewumi
Isaac Botchey, Jr.
Maxwell Osei-Ampofo
Hendry Sawe
Jay Lemery
Tracy Cushing
Lee A. Wallis
spellingShingle Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman
Julia Dixon
Taylor W. Burkholder
Nana Sefa
Hiren Patel
Anna Q. Yaffee
Amarachukwu Osisanya
Tolulope Oyewumi
Isaac Botchey, Jr.
Maxwell Osei-Ampofo
Hendry Sawe
Jay Lemery
Tracy Cushing
Lee A. Wallis
Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
author_facet Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman
Julia Dixon
Taylor W. Burkholder
Nana Sefa
Hiren Patel
Anna Q. Yaffee
Amarachukwu Osisanya
Tolulope Oyewumi
Isaac Botchey, Jr.
Maxwell Osei-Ampofo
Hendry Sawe
Jay Lemery
Tracy Cushing
Lee A. Wallis
author_sort Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman
title Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review
title_short Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review
title_full Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review
title_fullStr Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review
title_full_unstemmed Fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in Africa: A scoping review
title_sort fifteen years of emergency medicine literature in africa: a scoping review
publisher Elsevier
series African Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2211-419X
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Introduction: Emergency medicine (EM) throughout Africa exists in various stages of development. The number and types of scientific EM literature can serve as a proxy indicator of EM regional development and activity. The goal of this scoping review is a preliminary assessment of potential size and scope of available African EM literature published over 15 years. Methods: We searched five indexed international databases as well as non-indexed grey literature from 1999-2014 using key search terms including “Africa”, “emergency medicine”, “emergency medical services”, and “disaster.” Two trained physician reviewers independently assessed whether each article met one or more of five inclusion criteria, and discordant results were adjudicated by a senior reviewer. Articles were categorised by subject and country of origin. Publication number per country was normalised by 1,000,000 population. Results: Of 6091 identified articles, 633 (10.4%) were included. African publications increased 10-fold from 1999 to 2013 (9 to 94 articles, respectively). Western Africa had the highest number (212, 33.5%) per region. South Africa had the largest number of articles per country (171, 27.0%) followed by Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana. 537 (84.8%) articles pertained to facility-based EM, 188 (29.7%) to out-of-hospital emergency medicine, and 109 (17.2%) to disaster medicine. Predominant content areas were epidemiology (374, 59.1%), EM systems (321, 50.7%) and clinical care (262, 41.4%). The most common study design was observational (479, 75.7%), with only 28 (4.4%) interventional studies. All-comers (382, 59.9%) and children (91, 14.1%) were the most commonly studied patient populations. Undifferentiated (313, 49.4%) and traumatic (180, 28.4%) complaints were most common. Conclusion: Our review revealed a considerable increase in the growth of African EM literature from 1999 to 2014. Overwhelmingly, articles were observational, studied all-comers, and focused on undifferentiated complaints. The articles discovered in this scoping review are reflective of the relatively immature and growing state of African EM. Keywords: Emergency medicine, EM, Emergency medical services, EMS, Africa, Scoping review, Literature review
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X1830106X
work_keys_str_mv AT neekofimouldmillman fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT juliadixon fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT taylorwburkholder fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT nanasefa fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT hirenpatel fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT annaqyaffee fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT amarachukwuosisanya fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT tolulopeoyewumi fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT isaacbotcheyjr fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT maxwelloseiampofo fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT hendrysawe fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT jaylemery fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT tracycushing fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
AT leeawallis fifteenyearsofemergencymedicineliteratureinafricaascopingreview
_version_ 1725912859260485632