Karaba Florence, Nunes Ana Raquel, Geddes Olivia, Atherton Helen, Dahlmann Frederik, Eccles Abi, Gregg Michael, Spencer Rachel, Twohig Helen, Dale Jeremy
Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Sep 16;14(9):e087795. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087795.
There is growing recognition of the importance of primary care in addressing climate change. The World Organisation of Family Doctors has urged general practitioners worldwide to commit to tackling climate change and to serve as agents of systemic and individual change. Though an increasing number of resources have become available to support the decarbonisation of primary care, there remains a lack of evidence about how primary care teams are using them, their reach across practices, their level of adoption and maintenance, their cost impact and their effect on carbon emissions. This systematic review aims to understand how primary care, with a focus on general practice or equivalent settings within the context of primary care, is implementing decarbonisation actions to reduce carbon emissions arising from its operations, assess efficacy of the actions and generate recommendations on how to assist and accelerate their implementation and effectiveness.
The literature search will be conducted on Medline, Embase, Web of Science, CINAHL and ProQuest, from 2007 to 29 March 2024. Article screening will be based on specified inclusion and exclusion criteria. Narrative synthesis will be used to analyse and integrate findings to offer new insights into key mechanisms that support decarbonisation in general practice and help refine an initial programme theory. The reporting of the systematic review will follow the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis framework.
This review did not involve the collection or analysis of any data that was not included in previously published research in the public domain. The results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publication and conference presentations.
CRD42023470889.
人们越来越认识到初级保健在应对气候变化方面的重要性。世界家庭医生组织已敦促全球全科医生致力于应对气候变化,并成为系统和个人变革的推动者。尽管已有越来越多的资源可用于支持初级保健的脱碳工作,但关于初级保健团队如何使用这些资源、其在各医疗机构的覆盖范围、采用和维持水平、成本影响以及对碳排放的影响,仍缺乏相关证据。本系统评价旨在了解以初级保健为背景,重点关注全科医疗或类似环境的初级保健如何实施脱碳行动以减少其运营产生的碳排放,评估这些行动的成效,并就如何协助和加速其实施及成效提出建议。
将在2007年至2024年3月29日期间对Medline、Embase、科学网、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)和ProQuest进行文献检索。文章筛选将基于指定的纳入和排除标准。将采用叙述性综合分析方法来分析和整合研究结果,以便对支持全科医疗脱碳的关键机制提供新见解,并有助于完善初始的项目理论。本系统评价的报告将遵循系统评价与Meta分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)框架。
本评价不涉及收集或分析任何未包含在公共领域先前发表研究中的数据。研究结果将通过同行评审出版物和会议报告进行传播。
国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)注册号:CRD42023470889。