Orkin Aaron M, Curran Jeffrey D, Fortune Melanie K, McArthur Allison, Mew Emma J, Ritchie Stephen D, Van de Velde Stijn, VanderBurgh David
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Rescu, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2016 May 18;6(5):e010609. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010609.
The Disease Control Priorities Project recommends emergency care training for laypersons in low-resource settings, but evidence for these interventions has not yet been systematically reviewed. This review will identify the individual and community health effects of educating laypeople to deliver prehospital emergency care interventions in low-resource settings.
This systematic review addresses the following question: in underserviced populations and low-resource settings (P), does first aid or emergency care training or education for laypeople (I) confer any individual or community health benefit for emergency health conditions (O), in comparison with no training or other forms of education (C)? We restrict this review to studies reporting quantitatively measurable outcomes, and search 12 electronic bibliographic databases and grey literature sources. A team of expert content and methodology reviewers will conduct title and abstract screening and full-text review, using a custom-built online platform. Two investigators will independently extract methodological variables and outcomes related to patient-level morbidity and mortality and community-level effects on resilience or emergency care capacity. Two investigators will independently assess external validity, selection bias, performance bias, measurement bias, attrition bias and confounding. We will summarise the findings using a narrative approach to highlight similarities and differences between the gathered studies.
Formal ethical approval is not required.
The results will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed publication and knowledge translation strategy.
CRD42014009685.
疾病控制优先项目建议在资源匮乏地区对非专业人员进行急救培训,但尚未对这些干预措施的证据进行系统综述。本综述将确定在资源匮乏地区培训非专业人员实施院前急救干预措施对个人和社区健康的影响。
本系统综述针对以下问题展开:在服务不足的人群和资源匮乏地区(P),与未接受培训或其他形式教育(C)相比,对非专业人员进行急救或应急护理培训或教育(I)是否能为紧急健康状况带来任何个人或社区健康益处(O)?我们将本综述限制在报告定量可测量结果的研究,并检索12个电子书目数据库和灰色文献来源。一组专家内容和方法评审员将使用定制的在线平台进行标题和摘要筛选以及全文评审。两名研究人员将独立提取与患者层面的发病率和死亡率以及社区层面的恢复力或应急护理能力影响相关的方法变量和结果。两名研究人员将独立评估外部有效性、选择偏倚、执行偏倚、测量偏倚、失访偏倚和混杂因素。我们将采用叙述性方法总结研究结果,以突出所收集研究之间的异同。
无需正式伦理批准。
结果将通过同行评审出版物和知识转化策略进行传播。
CRD42014009685。