The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN): Rationale, development, and first steps

Since its formal recognition as a medical specialty, the field of pediatric emergency medicine has made substantial advances with respect to its scope and sophistication. These advances have occurred in clinical practice as well as in the research base to improve clinical practice. There remain, how...

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container_title Pediatric emergency care
container_volume 19
creator Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network
description Since its formal recognition as a medical specialty, the field of pediatric emergency medicine has made substantial advances with respect to its scope and sophistication. These advances have occurred in clinical practice as well as in the research base to improve clinical practice. There remain, however, many areas in emergency medical services for children (EMSC) in the out-of-hospital, emergency department (ED), and hospital settings that suffer from a lack of data to guide practice. In an effort to expand the quality and quantity of research in pediatric emergency care, the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) was created in October of 2001. PECARN is the first federally funded national network for research in EMSC and is the result of cooperative agreement grants funded through the Health Resources and Services Administration with the purpose of developing an infrastructure capable of overcoming inherent barriers to EMSC research. Among these recognized barriers are low incidence rates of serious pediatric emergency events, the need for large numbers of children from varied backgrounds to achieve broadly representative study samples, lack of an infrastructure to test the efficacy of pediatric emergency care, and the need for a mechanism to translate study results into clinical practice. PECARN will serve as a national platform for collaborative research involving the continuum of care within the EMSC system, including out-of-hospital care, patient transport, ED and in-hospital care, and rehabilitation. This article describes the history of EMSC, the need for a national collaborative research network in EMSC, the organization and development of PECARN, and the work plan for the network.
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subjects Advisory Committees - organization & administration
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child Health Services - organization & administration
Child Health Services - statistics & numerical data
Cooperative Behavior
Emergencies - epidemiology
Emergency and intensive care: neonates and children. Prematurity. Sudden death
Emergency Medical Services - organization & administration
Emergency Medical Services - statistics & numerical data
Emergency Service, Hospital - organization & administration
Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
Goals
Health Services Research - organization & administration
Humans
Intensive care medicine
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal - organization & administration
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal - statistics & numerical data
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric - organization & administration
Intensive Care Units, Pediatric - statistics & numerical data
Maternal Health Services - organization & administration
Maternal Health Services - statistics & numerical data
Medical sciences
Models, Theoretical
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care)
United States
title The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN): Rationale, development, and first steps
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