Global Health Group on Global Injury
The Global Injury Group is an equitable partnership between collaborative researchers across high-, middle- and low-income countries with the shared vision of improving the care of the injured through research. This project will help us understand the number of broken bones that happen in Africa and what treatments are available to patients. It will develop research teams and guide us for future research studies. This works towards our vision that the care for broken bones in poor countries can be safe, accessible, and appropriate to the resources of local health systems.
Find out about our research projects and meet our Project Team and Collaborating Institutions on the Global Injury Group website.
Background
Injuries are the leading cause of death in people aged 10-49 years. More people die from injuries than from HIV, malaria, and tuberculosis combined. For every person who dies, up to 50 people survive but become disabled. Broken bones account for most of these injuries, and these happen more often to people living in poor regions, including some countries in Africa. Across Africa, little is known about how many people break a bone, what healthcare services are available to treat them, how a broken bone affects patients/families, and how to improve recovery.
Themes
Our project has four parts:
(1) RESEARCH TRAINING AND RESOURCES: Doctors, nurses and healthcare workers involved in the care of patients with broken bones have limited training in how to conduct research, and have poor access to the resources to do research. This makes it more difficult to improve the care for their patients. We will look at the current levels of research training and organization. We will design educational resources to fill gaps in the current understanding and ability to do research.
(2) COUNTING BROKEN BONES: We will create a network of hospitals in our partner countries to study how often different types of broken bones occur. We will describe the resources (people and equipment) available to treat these injuries and how patients use these services. We collect this information for five broken bones that the World Health Organization (WHO) have identified to cause the most disability.
(3) UNDERSTANDING RECOVERY: We will find out how patients in our partner countries recover from their broken bones, and how this impacts on their livelihoods and those who care for them.
(4) STUDY FOR FUTURE RESEARCH: We want to understand how to do large-scale research for patients with broken bones throughout Africa. To do this we will run a small study in our network of hospitals to see what works well and what is challenging.
The project is from September 2024 – August 2028.
Community engagement and involvement
We have engaged with local patients and healthcare workers, whose opinions have informed our work so far. We will continue to integrate patients and community leaders to co-produce our research.
Dissemination
Patients, clinicians and methodologists will co-develop publications, social media, and events. We will work alongside policy makers in national government ministries and strengthen our relationship with leaders within the WHO to ensure that we disseminate our findings effectively and influence policy to drive improved patient care.
Objectives
Across three African countries (Malawi, South Africa and Tanzania) we plan to:
(1) develop the ability to research the care of people with broken bones,
(2) determine the number of people affected by broken bones,
(3) describe the healthcare resources available for the treatment of broken bones and work out what is important for the best delivery of services,
(4) measure how a broken bone impacts the lives and livelihoods of patients and their carers, and
(5) improve the recovery of patients with broken bones.
Joint Lead Investigators: Prof Simon Graham (UK) and Dr Linda Chokotho (Malawi)
Funding statement
This research is funded by the NIHR (NIHR155559) using UK international development funding from the UK Government to support global health research. The views expressed on this webpage are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the UK government. This work is also supported by the Medical Research Council (grant number MR/Y00955X/1).