Harnessing Data Science to Promote Equity in Injury and Surgery for Africa
University Of Buea, Buea
Investigators
Linked publications, trials & patents
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY The Data Science Center for Surgery, Injury, and Equity in Africa (D-SINE-Africa) is an NIH-funded research hub located at the University of Buea (Buea) in Cameroon through the current Data Science in Africa (DS-I Africa) initiative. D-SINE Africa is a strategic partnership between Buea, the University of California (Los Angeles (UCLA) and Berkeley), the Cameroonian Ministry of Public Health, the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cameroon, and the University of Cape Town in South Africa. This coalition is built upon a long-term collaboration between Buea and UCLA focused on decreasing the burden of surgical diseases in Cameroon and other sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. Injuries and other surgically treated diseases comprise a significant burden of disease in SSA, but opportunities for research and funding are sparse. Our work on injury and other surgical conditions has identified deep inequities that are particularly unmasked in acute care settings. The intersection between injury and equity is our priority area of study, as the inequities revealed by trauma are often symptomatic of larger, systemic, cross-cutting issues. Our mission is to leverage data science to decrease the impact of trauma, surgical disease, and disparities on the populations of Cameroon and SSA by promoting research, networking, and capacity building. We are accomplishing this through three Center Cores and two Research Projects. These two projects rely on the Cameroon Trauma Registry (CTR), a 10-hospital centralized data base that collects data on demographics, context, clinical care, and outcomes for trauma patients. To date, the CTR has collected data on over 8000 Cameroonian trauma patients and, at approximately 450 patients per month. The overall goal of D-SINE Africaâs Project 2 is to optimize follow up care, which is done through an mHealth follow up program that currently collects data from injured patients at two weeks, one month, three months, and six months after discharge, capturing rare information on disability and economic consequences of trauma. As poor mental health and previous injury are both risk factors for future injury, mental health issues have a compounding effect on trauma patientsâ future risk of injury and death. Consequently, our Project 2âs goal may be significantly affected by mental health conditions, which are currently not being measured in the mHealth program. This supplement aims to mitigate this unexpected challenge by modifying the existing follow up protocol. We aim to 1) adapt the existing follow up mHealth app to screen patients for the mental health conditions most commonly associated with traumatic injury; 2) estimate the prevalence of trauma patients who are at high risk for these conditions; and 3) evaluate the acceptability of a candidate community-based mental health intervention using a rapid qualitative CFIR framework-based deductive analysis. By achieving these aims, we will have a robust assessment of the prevalence of mental health correlates of trauma in Cameroon, allowing us to incorporate them into our Project 2âs follow up optimization, and have a preliminary understanding of the acceptability of a promisingintervention.
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