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Improving Outcomes for Ill and Injured Children in Emergency Departments: Protocol for a Program in Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Knowledge Translation Science
Implementation Science
  • Shannon Scott, University of Alberta
  • Lisa Hartling, University of Alberta
  • Jeremy Grimshaw, University of Ottawa
  • David Johnson, University of Calgary
  • Martin Osmond, University of Ottawa
  • Amy Plint, University of Ottawa
  • Rollin Brant, University of British Columbia
  • Jamie C. Brehaut, University of Ottawa
  • Ian D. Graham, Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  • Gillian Currie, University of Calgary
  • Nicola Shaw, University of Alberta
  • Maala Bhatt, McGill University
  • Tim Lynch, University of Western Ontario
  • Liza Bialy, University of Alberta
  • Terry Klassen, University of Alberta
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-22-2009
URL with Digital Object Identifier
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-5908-4-60
Disciplines
Abstract

Approximately one-quarter of all Canadian children will seek emergency care in any given year, with the two most common medical problems affecting children in the emergency department (ED) being acute respiratory illness and injury. Treatment for some medical conditions in the ED remains controversial due to a lack of strong supporting evidence.

The purpose of this paper is to describe a multi-centre team grant in pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) that has been recently funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). This program of research integrates clinical research (in the areas of acute respiratory illness and injury) and knowledge translation (KT). This initiative includes seven distinct projects that address the objective to generate new evidence for clinical care and KT in the pediatric ED. Five of the seven research projects in this team grant make significant contributions to knowledge development in KT science, and these contributions are the focus of this paper.

The research designs employed in this program include: cross-sectional surveys, randomized controlled trials (RCTs), quasi-experimental designs with interrupted time-series analysis and staggered implementation strategies, and qualitative designs.

This team grant provides unique opportunities for making important KT methodological developments, with a particular focus on developing a better theoretical understanding of the causal mechanisms and effect modifiers of different KT interventions.

Citation Information
Shannon Scott, Lisa Hartling, Jeremy Grimshaw, David Johnson, et al.. "Improving Outcomes for Ill and Injured Children in Emergency Departments: Protocol for a Program in Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Knowledge Translation Science" Implementation Science Vol. 4 Iss. 60 (2009)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tim-lynch/2/