Muchatuta Monalisa, Patel Shama, Gonzalez Marquez Catalina, Thilakasiri Kaushila, Manian Sreenidhi Vanyaa, Chan Jennifer, Mssika Ngassa, Clark Taryn, Burkholder Taylor, Turgeon Nikkole, Kampalath Vinay N, Poola Nivedita, Offorjebe O Agatha, Dozois Adeline, Hyuha Gimbo, Vaughan-Ogunlusi Oluwarotimi, McCammon Carol, Wells Katie, Rybarczk Megan, Castillo Maria Paula, Adeyeye Adebisi Anthonia, Rees Chris A, Dutta Sanjukta, Garbern Stephanie Chow
Department of Emergency Medicine SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn New York USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine University of Florida Jacksonville Florida USA.
AEM Educ Train. 2024 May 16;8(3):e10982. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10982. eCollection 2024 Jun.
Global emergency medicine (GEM) is situated at the intersection of global health and emergency medicine (EM), which is built upon a history of colonial systems and institutions that continue to reinforce inequities between high-income countries (HICs) and low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) today. These power imbalances yield disparities in GEM practice, research, and education.
The Global Emergency Medicine Academy (GEMA) of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine formed the Decolonizing GEM Working Group in 2020, which now includes over 100 worldwide members. The mission is to address colonial legacies in GEM and catalyze sustainable changes and recommendations toward decolonization at individual and institutional levels. To develop recommendations to decolonize GEM, the group conducted a nonsystematic review of existing literature on decolonizing global health, followed by in-depth discussions between academics from LMICs and HICs to explore implications and challenges specific to GEM. We then synthesized actionable solutions to provide recommendations on decolonizing GEM.
Despite the rapidly expanding body of literature on decolonizing global health, there is little guidance specific to the relatively new field of GEM. By applying decolonizing principles to GEM, we suggest key priorities for improving equity in academic GEM: (1) reframing partnerships to place LMIC academics in positions of expertise and power, (2) redirecting research funding toward LMIC-driven projects and investigators, (3) creating more equitable practices in establishing authorship, and (4) upholding principles of decolonization in the education of EM trainees from LMICs and HICs.
Understanding the colonial roots of GEM will allow us to look more critically at current health disparities and identify inequitable institutionalized practices within our profession that continue to uphold these misguided concepts. A decolonized future of GEM depends on our recognition and rectification of colonial-era practices that shape structural determinants of health care delivery and scientific advancement.
全球急诊医学(GEM)处于全球健康与急诊医学(EM)的交叉点,其建立在殖民体系和机构的历史基础之上,而这些体系和机构至今仍在强化高收入国家(HICs)与低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)之间的不平等。这些权力失衡导致了全球急诊医学在实践、研究和教育方面的差异。
学术急诊医学协会的全球急诊医学学会(GEMA)于2020年成立了非殖民化全球急诊医学工作组,目前该工作组在全球拥有100多名成员。其使命是解决全球急诊医学中的殖民遗产问题,并在个人和机构层面推动实现非殖民化的可持续变革和建议。为了制定使全球急诊医学非殖民化的建议,该小组对现有的关于全球健康非殖民化的文献进行了非系统性综述,随后低收入和中等收入国家与高收入国家的学者进行了深入讨论,以探讨全球急诊医学特有的影响和挑战。然后,我们综合了可行的解决方案,以提供关于使全球急诊医学非殖民化的建议。
尽管关于全球健康非殖民化的文献迅速增多,但对于相对较新的全球急诊医学领域,具体指导却很少。通过将非殖民化原则应用于全球急诊医学,我们提出了改善学术性全球急诊医学公平性的关键优先事项:(1)重新构建伙伴关系,使低收入和中等收入国家的学者处于专业知识和权力地位;(2)将研究资金重新导向由低收入和中等收入国家推动的项目和研究人员;(3)在确定作者身份方面创造更公平的做法;(4)在对来自低收入和中等收入国家以及高收入国家的急诊医学实习生的教育中坚持非殖民化原则。
了解全球急诊医学的殖民根源将使我们能够更批判性地审视当前的健康差异,并识别我们专业内持续维护这些错误观念的不公平的制度化做法。全球急诊医学的非殖民化未来取决于我们对塑造医疗保健提供和科学进步的结构决定因素的殖民时代做法的认识和纠正。