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African Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2015
Every two years, the African Federation for Emergency Medicine (AFEM) hosts an academic assembly focusing on emergency care on the continent of Africa. After a successful conference in Ghana two years ago, the 2014 conference was hosted in Addis Ababa in the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia. More than 500 participants from nearly 30 countries participated in the three-day meeting that focused on innovative educational, administrative and research components of African based emergency medicine. The next conference was awarded to Cairo, Egypt and will be take place in the fall of 2016. Background The second African Conference on Emergency Medicine was held from November 4th-6th at the United Nations Conference Centre in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The conference organizing committee was made up of individuals from the
ACEM involvement in a successful African emergency medicine programme
Emergency Medicine Australasia, 2018
In the past 5 years Botswana graduated its first home-grown doctors and emergency medicine specialists for the country. The postgraduate emergency medicine specialist training arrangement between Botswana and South Africa was challenging in development, implementation and maintenance. Numerous varied supports from ACEM and its International Emergency Medicine Network were integral to these successes. This article encourages further investment of ACEM grants and scholarships in Africa by describing how ACEM supported significant advances in Botswana emergency medicine.
African Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2014
La première conférence internationale sur la médecine d’urgence (MU) s’est tenue les 15 et 16 mai 2014 à l’International Convention Centre de Gaborone, au Botswana. Le soutien affiché par les principales parties prenantes a permis de positionner la conférence, dès sa conception, sur la délivrance de directives proposées par des experts sur la pertinence de la médecine d’urgence, son enseignement et la mise en œuvre de systèmes s’y rapportant. Le thème de la conférence était, fort à propos, « Établir le programme d’action en médecine d’urgence dans la région Afrique australe ». Plus de 300 délégués, locaux, régionaux et internationaux, se sont réunis pour prendre part à cet événement marquant. Les pays représentés incluaient notamment le Botswana, l’Afrique du Sud, la Zambie, la Namibie, le Zimbabwe, le Swaziland, le Lesotho, le Nigeria et les États-Unis. Les hypothèses de la conférence ont permis de croiser les soins d’urgence, le fardeau des blessures et de la maladie en Afrique et...
Emergency medicine development in Ethiopia: Challenges, progress and possibilities
African Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2013
Ethiopia does not have the facilities, equipment and human resource with the essential skills to support a coordinated emergency medical care system and as such lacks the basic infrastructure for delivering emergency care. The country has made significant improvements in the last two decades, particularly with regard to training of key Emergency Medical personnel. Nevertheless, much remains to be done, and numerous opportunities exist to make additional improvements in both the short and long term. This article provides a historical overview of the development of emergency medicine in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, critically examines the specific challenges faced and presents the various efforts over the past several years by national and international partners trying to address these challenges. It describes what has been achieved and proposes key recommendations
African Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2019
Evidence based medicine is the standard of modern health care practices. Ongoing biomedical research is needed to expand existing knowledge and improve quality of care, but it needs to reach clinicians to drive change. Journal articles and conference presentations are dissemination tools. The aim of the study was to establish the publication rate of scientific abstracts presented at the first and second African Conference of Emergency Medicine. The secondary objectives were establishing non-publication dissemination and the factors associated with publication and non-publication. Determining non-publication dissemination patterns and the factors associated with reasons for publishing or non-publication were also investigated. Methods: Presenters of the 129 scientific abstracts from the first and second African Conference of Emergency Medicine were invited to participate in an online survey. The survey was followed by a manual literature search to identify published manuscripts of authors that did not complete the survey, to determine the most accurate publication rate. Results: Thirty-one presenters responded (24%), of which 18 published in a peer-reviewed journal. An additional 25 publications were identified by the literature search. The overall publication rate was 33.3% (26.9% from 2012 and 40.3% from 2014). Oral presentations were more likely to be published (p = 0.09). Sixteen manuscripts (37.2%) were published in the African Journal of Emergency Medicine. Presentations at local academic meetings were the most used platform beyond publication (43%). The main reason to publish was to add to the body of knowledge (100%), while lack of time (57%) was the major obstacle for not publishing. Conclusion: The overall publication rate for the first and second Africa Conferences of Emergency Medicine is comparable to other non-African Emergency Medicine conferences. The increasing publication trend between conferences might reflect the development of regional research capacity. Emergency Medicine providers in Africa need to be encouraged to participate in high quality, locally relevant research and to distribute those findings through accessible formats.
2013
Ethiopia does not have the facilities, equipment and human resource with the essential skills to support a coordinated emergency medical care system and as such lacks the basic infrastructure for delivering emergency care. The country has made significant improvements in the last two decades, particularly with regard to training of key Emergency Medical personnel. Nevertheless, much remains to be done, and numerous opportunities exist to make additional improvements in both the short and long term. This article provides a historical overview of the development of emergency medicine in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, critically examines the specific challenges faced and presents the various efforts over the past several years by national and international partners trying to address these challenges. It describes what has been achieved and proposes key recommendations
Emergency medical services in Ethiopia: Drivers, challenges and opportunities
Human Antibodies, 2019
BACKGROUND: Ethiopia has well established health care system but not have significant improvements on emergency medical services and have shortage of equally initiative among all regional states and city administration of Ethiopia. This study aimed to examine the drivers, challenges, and opportunities of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and to identify new evidence for future policy making in Ethiopia. METHOD: A narrative review of the literature related to EMS was undertaken to describe the drivers, challenges, and opportunities for EMS in Ethiopia from July, 2000 to September, 2018. The search was done from four relevant electronic databases: MEDLINE, Science Directs, Scopus and PubMed by using Google Scholar and Google with key search words used mainly as "Emergency Medical services in Ethiopia". The inclusion criteria were an original study or review studies involving Emergency Medical Services in Ethiopia. Among the available papers, the relevant articles were selected while the irrelevant ones were excluded. RESULTS: There was lack of trained emergency medical providers and misdistribution of trained professionals, immaturity of the program, lack of partnership and stakeholders and lack of motivation towards Emergency medical services. Emergency medical services hamper significant problems similar to other African countries that required being addressed in Ethiopia context for achieving the program and in order to obtain intended outcomes for the country. CONCLUSION: A long-term discussion is needed to further improves services system in various health care facilities. An Emergency Medical services policy making and analysis framework is needed to make quality emergency medical care at Emergency department in hospitals and outside the hospitals.