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Publications in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health

A world-leading paediatrics journal The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health is an independent journal with an international perspective and a strong clinical focus. We present the most influential and innovative practice-changing original research, as well as authoritative reviews and insightful opinion pieces to promote the health of the whole child, from the fetal period through to young adulthood. We invite submissions that will directly impact clinical practice or child health across the disciplines of general paediatrics, adolescent medicine, or child development, and across all paediatric subspecialties including (but not limited to) allergy and immunology, cardiology, critical care, endocrinology, fetal and neonatal medicine, gastroenterology, haematology, hepatology and nutrition, infectious diseases, neurology, oncology, psychiatry, respiratory medicine, and surgery. We publish a range of content types including Articles, Review, Viewpoint, Clinical Picture, Comment, and Correspondence. We also publish Series and Commissions that aim to shape and drive positive change in clinical practice and health policy in areas of need in child and adolescent health. Learn more about the types of papers we publish.

Published on

December 20, 2024

NOMIS Researcher

Luregn Schlapbach

Building global collaborative research networks in paediatric critical care: a roadmap

Paediatric critical care units are designed for children at a vulnerable stage of development, yet the evidence base for practice and policy in paediatric critical care remains scarce. In this Health Policy, we present a roadmap providing strategic guidance for international paediatric critical care trials. We convened a multidisciplinary group of 32 paediatric critical care experts from six continents representing paediatric critical care research networks and groups. The group identified key challenges to paediatric critical care research, including lower patient numbers than for adult critical care, heterogeneity related to cognitive development, comorbidities and illness or injury, consent challenges, disproportionately little research funding for paediatric critical care, and poor infrastructure in resource-limited settings. A seven-point roadmap was proposed: (1) formation of an international paediatric critical care research network; (2) development of a web-based toolkit library to support paediatric critical care trials; (3) establishment of a global paediatric critical care trial repository, including systematic prioritisation of topics and populations for interventional trials; (4) development of a harmonised trial minimum set of trial data elements and data dictionary; (5) building of infrastructure and capability to support platform trials; (6) funder advocacy; and (7) development of a collaborative implementation programme. Implementation of this roadmap will contribute to the successful design and conduct of trials that match the needs of globally diverse paediatric populations.

Research Fields

Emergency & Critical Care Medicine, Pediatrics

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