Parasite elimination programs: home and away

The difficulty we will face is to control for many of these variables, and this will require longitudinal studies and samples from multiple sites. Hence, we are not yet able to make specific recommendations about interventions to “improve” communication in emergency departments. Indeed, there are no benchmarks against which to compare these data, so we cannot even say whether the data reflect good practice. Given these uncertainties, we agree with Nocera that it is too early to say which interventions would be appropriate to the specific circumstances of emergency departments, and we made no specific recommendations ourselves, but rather summarised commonly suggested interventions. Nocera and O’Connor also suggest other interventions which in their clinical experience may improve communication loads in emergency departments. It is likely that the variability of organisational settings will mean most such interventions will need to be customised to local conditions and needs. Hamilton is correct to highlight the tension in reporting data on organisational performance, and the risks of these data being misinterpreted or misused. Given these risks and the lack of comparative benchmarks, we explicitly chose not to comment on performance, nor to identify the organisations or participating clinicians. However, we would not have been able to carry out the study without the full cooperation of the staff at both hospitals, and, while they remain anonymous, we are deeply indebted to them for their willingness to welcome us into their workplace, volunteering to be subjects, and allowing us to observe them as they carried out their work.

[1]  J. McCarthy,et al.  Parasite elimination programs: home and away , 2002 .

[2]  J. Reynoldson,et al.  Towards the eradication of hookworm in an isolated Australian community , 2001, The Lancet.

[3]  L. Savioli,et al.  Control strategies for human intestinal nematode infections. , 1999, Advances in parasitology.

[4]  J. Hargrave,et al.  Leprosy control in the Northern Territory , 1998, Australian and New Zealand journal of public health.

[5]  M. Gracey,et al.  The prevalence of hookworm infection, iron deficiency and anaemia in an Aboriginal community in north‐west Australia , 1997, The Medical journal of Australia.

[6]  P. Prociv,et al.  Evidence for larval hypobiosis in Australian strains of Ancylostoma duodenale. , 1995, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[7]  P. Prociv,et al.  The changing epidemiology of human hookworm infection in Australia , 1995, The Medical journal of Australia.