Document Type : Commentary
Authors
1 Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
2 Meditech Foundation, Cali, Colombia
Abstract
Keywords
Trauma registries are fundamental in the development of organized trauma and emergency care systems globally. They help to support a wide range of processes, including quality improvement and policy development.1,2 They also support research efforts and allow the comprehension of the disease from both epidemiological and financial perspectives.3,4 In the current study by Barthélemy et al,5 it is important to understand that neurotrauma registries in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are heterogeneous with limitations in the use of common data elements, generating a barrier for comparisons between studies and for the development of further meta-analyses.
Other difficulties that have been found in registry implementation efforts of LMICs include low data quality and barriers generated by administrators who do not consider this type of effort a priority for local funding.6 We recognize from firsthand experience many of these issues, from the development of the Latin America and the Caribbean Neurotrauma Registry (LATINO-TBI). We present a brief commentary regarding this experience and how we faced the same barriers discussed in the publication of Barthélemy et al.
The LATINO neurotrauma registry is a data collection instrument based on the National Institutes of Health (NIH) common data elements for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and adapted to the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations for the basic elements for global trauma registries. The combination of these perspectives allows this effort to be adaptable to different contexts, like the ones that we found in the Latin America (LATAM) region.7
In this registry, even centers with fewer resources can participate and transition from a minimal data set to a more complete one as they increase the level of development and support from local administrative authorities. Additionally, to overcome language barriers, the LATINO-TBI registry is available in Spanish, English, and Portuguese, which are the most common languages in the region, with the same internal coding to facilitate cross-country analysis and comparative analysis with other databases.
The registry project is available at https://www.latinotbi.com/. It is an open project that allows centers in the region to analyze their data individually and participate in multi-institutional analysis. Mostly, we face barriers associated with the lack of local administrative support at participating institutions and incomplete data, especially in sections like prehospital care and outcome data after hospital discharge.
Organized neurotrauma care has been associated with improved outcomes and decreased burden of the disease. The concept of organized neurotrauma care includes aspects from prevention to rehabilitation services, crossing echelons of care at prehospital, emergency department, surgery, and intensive care levels The neurotrauma registries allow for the evaluation of interventional impact at all these stages. Systemic data, including demographic and epidemiological variables, urgent care variables, and critical and chronic care variables allow us to understand the ecology of care, and evaluate critical aspects like cost and effectiveness of interventions.8,9
In LMICs, these data are difficult to find in past and present studies. Efforts like the study of Barthélemy et al, pooling data from the few available studies, show the flaws and barriers present in the actual literature and support the requirement of better data collection systems for neurotrauma studies in these areas globally.10
TBI is considered the most common condition requiring medical and surgical management worldwide, affecting both high-income countries (HICs) and LMICs. Neurotrauma is a disease prevalent in areas that are more dependent on personal transportation (non-public transport), especially motorcycles. Motorcycles are the preferred vehicles in LMICs, generating more risk due to low road quality, poor preventive policies, and low level of reinforcement of healthy behaviors when driving.11,12 Differences in metrics of the Global Burden of Diseases Study show that the burden of trauma affects mostly the young population globally (Figure 1). The data in LMICs — and especially in low-income countries — is misrepresented due to the low availability of sound data registries associated with trauma care (Figure 2).13 These issues have been recently discussed in papers published by the group of investigators from the Global Surgery and Social Change of Harvard University,14,15 where important figures from the global neurosurgery movement have been trained, including the author of the commented International Journal of Health Policy and Management paper, Dr. Barthélemy.
Neurotrauma registries are fundamental for capacity building in organized neurotrauma care. Heterogeneity is present in some registries, but especially in registries in LMICs. Barriers include lack of support from local hospital administrators and difficulties in obtaining prehospital and outcome data after discharge. We need harmonization of neurotrauma registries with efforts like the NIH common data elements for TBI. The LATINO neurotrauma registry is an example of a neurotrauma registry based in LMICs that fills gaps in TBI management within LMICs.
Not applicable.
Authors declare that they have no competing interests.
AMR and AC develop the idea, write and checked the final version of the manuscript.