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A consensus exercise identifying priorities for research in the field of General Surgery of Childhood in the United Kingdom

A consensus exercise identifying priorities for research in the field of General Surgery of Childhood in the United Kingdom
A consensus exercise identifying priorities for research in the field of General Surgery of Childhood in the United Kingdom
Aims: the evidence base underlying clinical practice in children’s general surgery is poor and high quality collaborative clinical research is required to address current treatment uncertainties. The aim of this study was to identify research priorities for clinical research in this field amongst surgeons who treat children through a consensus process.

Methods: questions were invited in a scoping survey amongst General Surgeons and Specialist Paediatric Surgeons. These were refined by the study team and subsequently prioritised in a 2-stage modified Delphi process.

Results: in the scoping survey a total of 226 questions covering a broad scope of children’s elective and emergency general surgery were submitted by 76 different clinicians. These were refined to 71 research questions for prioritisation. One hundred and sixty-eight clinicians took part in stage one of the prioritisation process and 157 in stage two. A ‘Top 10’ list of priority research questions was generated for both elective and emergency general surgery of childhood. These cover a range of conditions and concepts including inguinal hernia, undescended testis, appendicitis, abdominal trauma and enhanced recovery pathways.

Conclusion: through consensus amongst surgeons who treat children, ten priority research questions for each of elective and emergency fields have been identified. These should provide a basis for the development of high-quality multicentre research projects to address these questions, and ultimately improve outcomes for children requiring surgical care.

2474-9842
Hall, Nigel
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Rees, Clare M.
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Rhodes, Hannah
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Williams, Alun
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Vipond, Mark
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Gordon, Andrew
881978c8-05db-4bc8-a1a1-3a266a5ee50c
Evans, D andrew
67009fbb-3ee5-40e9-b9de-6e9383118d91
Wood, Richard J
130a9615-31c2-494e-b3d6-2b66a72f252c
Bytheway, Jane
e6e82006-3136-4f5b-b8f4-ed169720aa05
Sutcliffe, Jonathan
caae072b-8185-4c40-86e0-501fea65c773
Hall, Nigel
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Rees, Clare M.
4c0cd8df-cb2c-4d8a-89c0-352a6006ef62
Rhodes, Hannah
22280179-f2c3-4291-b513-c15d05c3665f
Williams, Alun
7a782efc-cc04-4df8-b87b-e91a250b4cf9
Vipond, Mark
15e23f1b-dfb8-40f5-84e2-930713d7b6ac
Gordon, Andrew
881978c8-05db-4bc8-a1a1-3a266a5ee50c
Evans, D andrew
67009fbb-3ee5-40e9-b9de-6e9383118d91
Wood, Richard J
130a9615-31c2-494e-b3d6-2b66a72f252c
Bytheway, Jane
e6e82006-3136-4f5b-b8f4-ed169720aa05
Sutcliffe, Jonathan
caae072b-8185-4c40-86e0-501fea65c773

Hall, Nigel, Rees, Clare M., Rhodes, Hannah, Williams, Alun, Vipond, Mark, Gordon, Andrew, Evans, D andrew, Wood, Richard J, Bytheway, Jane and Sutcliffe, Jonathan (2020) A consensus exercise identifying priorities for research in the field of General Surgery of Childhood in the United Kingdom. BJS Open. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims: the evidence base underlying clinical practice in children’s general surgery is poor and high quality collaborative clinical research is required to address current treatment uncertainties. The aim of this study was to identify research priorities for clinical research in this field amongst surgeons who treat children through a consensus process.

Methods: questions were invited in a scoping survey amongst General Surgeons and Specialist Paediatric Surgeons. These were refined by the study team and subsequently prioritised in a 2-stage modified Delphi process.

Results: in the scoping survey a total of 226 questions covering a broad scope of children’s elective and emergency general surgery were submitted by 76 different clinicians. These were refined to 71 research questions for prioritisation. One hundred and sixty-eight clinicians took part in stage one of the prioritisation process and 157 in stage two. A ‘Top 10’ list of priority research questions was generated for both elective and emergency general surgery of childhood. These cover a range of conditions and concepts including inguinal hernia, undescended testis, appendicitis, abdominal trauma and enhanced recovery pathways.

Conclusion: through consensus amongst surgeons who treat children, ten priority research questions for each of elective and emergency fields have been identified. These should provide a basis for the development of high-quality multicentre research projects to address these questions, and ultimately improve outcomes for children requiring surgical care.

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Consenus paper final Nov 2020 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 November 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 445517
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445517
ISSN: 2474-9842
PURE UUID: 4a850ffb-e99f-4fb5-93d0-bf6f02fccdc8
ORCID for Nigel Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374

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Date deposited: 14 Dec 2020 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:24

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Contributors

Author: Nigel Hall ORCID iD
Author: Clare M. Rees
Author: Hannah Rhodes
Author: Alun Williams
Author: Mark Vipond
Author: Andrew Gordon
Author: D andrew Evans
Author: Richard J Wood
Author: Jane Bytheway
Author: Jonathan Sutcliffe

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