TY - JOUR
T1 - Essential Emergency and Critical Care
T2 - A consensus among global clinical experts
AU - The EECC Collaborators
AU - Schell, Carl Otto
AU - Khalid, Karima
AU - Wharton-Smith, Alexandra
AU - Oliwa, Jacquie
AU - Sawe, Hendry R.
AU - Roy, Nobhojit
AU - Sanga, Alex
AU - Marshall, John C.
AU - Rylance, Jamie
AU - Hanson, Claudia
AU - Kayambankadzanja, Raphael K.
AU - Wallis, Lee A.
AU - Jirwe, Maria
AU - Baker, Tim
AU - Asghar, Adam
AU - Laytin, Adam D.
AU - Holloway, Adrian J.
AU - El Adib, Ahmed Rhassane
AU - Michaelides, Alexia
AU - Munoz, Alvaro Coronado
AU - Muzuka, Amos
AU - Fernández, Analía
AU - Pembe, Andrea B.
AU - Wellhagen, Andreas
AU - Smith, Andrew G.
AU - Gadgil, Anita
AU - Hvarfner, Anna
AU - Abayadeera, Anuja
AU - Agulnik, Asya
AU - Godard, Aurélie
AU - Venkatesh, Balasubramanian
AU - Yousif, Bargo Mahamat
AU - Morton, Ben
AU - Sarang, Bhakti
AU - Vijayaraghavan, Bharath Kumar Tirupakuzhi
AU - King, Bobby
AU - Rice, Brian
AU - Thwaites, C. Louise
AU - Tai, Chian Wern
AU - Owoo, Christian
AU - Sendagire, Cornelius
AU - Petersen, Dan Brun
AU - Tatay, Daniel
AU - Skinner, David Lee
AU - Kinyua, Denis
AU - Ghosh, Dhruva
AU - Aryal, Diptesh
AU - Mlombwa, Donald
AU - Bui, Duyen Thi Hanh
AU - Waweru-Siika, Wangari
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
PY - 2021/9/21
Y1 - 2021/9/21
N2 - Background Globally, critical illness results in millions of deaths every year. Although many of these deaths are potentially preventable, the basic, life-saving care of critically ill patients are often overlooked in health systems. Essential Emergency and Critical Care (EECC) has been devised as the care that should be provided to all critically ill patients in all hospitals in the world. EECC includes the effective care of low cost and low complexity for the identification and treatment of critically ill patients across all medical specialties. This study aimed to specify the content of EECC and additionally, given the surge of critical illness in the ongoing pandemic, the essential diagnosis-specific care for critically ill patients with COVID-19. Methods In a Delphi process, consensus (>90% agreement) was sought from a diverse panel of global clinical experts. The panel iteratively rated proposed treatments and actions based on previous guidelines and the WHO/ICRC's Basic Emergency Care. The output from the Delphi was adapted iteratively with specialist reviewers into a coherent and feasible package of clinical processes plus a list of hospital readiness requirements. Results The 269 experts in the Delphi panel had clinical experience in different acute medical specialties from 59 countries and from all resource settings. The agreed EECC package contains 40 clinical processes and 67 requirements, plus additions specific for COVID-19. Conclusion The study has specified the content of care that should be provided to all critically ill patients. Implementing EECC could be an effective strategy for policy makers to reduce preventable deaths worldwide.
AB - Background Globally, critical illness results in millions of deaths every year. Although many of these deaths are potentially preventable, the basic, life-saving care of critically ill patients are often overlooked in health systems. Essential Emergency and Critical Care (EECC) has been devised as the care that should be provided to all critically ill patients in all hospitals in the world. EECC includes the effective care of low cost and low complexity for the identification and treatment of critically ill patients across all medical specialties. This study aimed to specify the content of EECC and additionally, given the surge of critical illness in the ongoing pandemic, the essential diagnosis-specific care for critically ill patients with COVID-19. Methods In a Delphi process, consensus (>90% agreement) was sought from a diverse panel of global clinical experts. The panel iteratively rated proposed treatments and actions based on previous guidelines and the WHO/ICRC's Basic Emergency Care. The output from the Delphi was adapted iteratively with specialist reviewers into a coherent and feasible package of clinical processes plus a list of hospital readiness requirements. Results The 269 experts in the Delphi panel had clinical experience in different acute medical specialties from 59 countries and from all resource settings. The agreed EECC package contains 40 clinical processes and 67 requirements, plus additions specific for COVID-19. Conclusion The study has specified the content of care that should be provided to all critically ill patients. Implementing EECC could be an effective strategy for policy makers to reduce preventable deaths worldwide.
KW - COVID-19
KW - health policy
KW - health services research
KW - health systems
KW - surgery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85115863063&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006585
DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006585
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85115863063
SN - 2059-7908
VL - 6
JO - BMJ Global Health
JF - BMJ Global Health
IS - 9
M1 - e006585
ER -