Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida.
West J Emerg Med. 2021 Oct 27;22(6):1360-1368. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2021.4.51518.
Social emergency medicine (EM) is an emerging field that examines the intersection of emergency care and social factors that influence health outcomes. We conducted a scoping review to explore the breadth and content of existing research pertaining to social EM to identify potential areas where future social EM research efforts should be directed.
We conducted a comprehensive PubMed search using Medical Subject Heading terms and phrases pertaining to social EM topic areas (e.g., "homelessness," "housing instability") based on previously published expert consensus. For searches that yielded fewer than 100 total publications, we used the PubMed "similar publications" tool to expand the search and ensure no relevant publications were missed. Studies were independently abstracted by two investigators and classified as relevant if they were conducted in US or Canadian emergency departments (ED). We classified relevant publications by study design type (observational or interventional research, systematic review, or commentary), publication site, and year. Discrepancies in relevant publications or classification were reviewed by a third investigator.
Our search strategy yielded 1,571 publications, of which 590 (38%) were relevant to social EM; among relevant publications, 58 (10%) were interventional studies, 410 (69%) were observational studies, 26 (4%) were systematic reviews, and 96 (16%) were commentaries. The majority (68%) of studies were published between 2010-2020. Firearm research and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) health research in particular grew rapidly over the last five years. The human trafficking topic area had the highest percentage (21%) of interventional studies. A significant portion of publications -- as high as 42% in the firearm violence topic area - included observational data or interventions related to children or the pediatric ED. Areas with more search results often included many publications describing disparities known to predispose ED patients to adverse outcomes (e.g., socioeconomic or racial disparities), or the influence of social determinants on ED utilization.
Social emergency medicine research has been growing over the past 10 years, although areas such as firearm violence and LGBTQ health have had more research activity than other topics. The field would benefit from a consensus-driven research agenda.
社会急诊医学(EM)是一个新兴领域,研究急诊护理和影响健康结果的社会因素之间的交集。我们进行了范围界定审查,以探索与社会 EM 相关的现有研究的广度和内容,以确定未来社会 EM 研究工作应集中的潜在领域。
我们根据先前发表的专家共识,使用与社会 EM 主题领域(例如,“无家可归”,“住房不稳定”)相关的医学主题词和短语,在 PubMed 上进行了全面搜索。对于产生的搜索结果少于 100 篇总出版物的搜索,我们使用 PubMed 的“相似出版物”工具来扩展搜索,以确保不会错过任何相关出版物。两名研究人员独立对研究进行了摘要,并将在美加急诊部(ED)进行的研究归类为相关。我们根据研究设计类型(观察性或干预性研究、系统评价或评论)、出版物地点和年份对相关出版物进行分类。由第三位研究人员审查相关出版物或分类中的差异。
我们的搜索策略产生了 1571 篇出版物,其中 590 篇(38%)与社会 EM 相关;在相关出版物中,58 篇(10%)为干预性研究,410 篇(69%)为观察性研究,26 篇(4%)为系统评价,96 篇(16%)为评论。大多数(68%)研究发表于 2010-2020 年。在过去五年中,枪支研究和女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别和 queer(LGBTQ)健康研究尤其迅速增长。人口贩运主题领域的干预性研究比例最高(21%)。相当一部分出版物 - 在枪支暴力主题领域高达 42% - 包括与儿童或儿科 ED 相关的观察数据或干预措施。搜索结果较多的领域通常包括许多描述已知使 ED 患者处于不利结果风险的差异的出版物(例如,社会经济或种族差异),或社会决定因素对 ED 使用的影响。
在过去的 10 年中,社会急诊医学研究一直在增长,尽管枪支暴力和 LGBTQ 健康等领域的研究活动比其他主题更多。该领域将受益于共识驱动的研究议程。