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Multisociety Task Force for Critical Care Research: key issues and recommendations.

Clifford S Deutschman1, Tom Ahrens, Charles B Cairns

  • 1Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Developing a unified critical care research agenda requires collaboration across disciplines. This framework addresses challenges and proposes integrated approaches for future research initiatives.

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Area of Science:

  • Critical Care Medicine
  • Translational Research
  • Implementation Science

Background:

  • Diverse stakeholders in critical care research face challenges in identifying collective priorities.
  • Current research landscape spans multiple departments and specialties, hindering unified progress.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To establish a comprehensive critical care research agenda.
  • To create a blueprint for future critical care research initiatives by engaging diverse stakeholders.

Main Methods:

  • A task force formed by leaders from major critical care societies (AACN, ACCP, ATS, SCCM) and USCIITG was convened.
  • 25 experts were divided into subgroups focusing on basic, translational, clinical, implementation, and educational research.
  • Subgroups utilized conference calls, and a 2-day in-person meeting facilitated detailed discussion and priority identification.

Main Results:

  • Key challenges, priority areas, and process improvement recommendations for critical care research were identified.
  • Four overarching themes emerged: moving beyond siloed research, linking research areas (e.g., basic-translational, clinical-implementation), accounting for patient complexity, and enhancing research infrastructure.
  • The findings provide a foundation for a more integrated and effective approach to critical care research.

Conclusions:

  • A multiprofessional consensus on critical care research themes and recommendations was achieved.
  • This document offers a novel framework to guide future research endeavors in critical care medicine.