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Optimal Evidence in Difficult Settings: Improving Health Interventions and Decision Making in Disasters

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The full article is available in PLOS Medicine

As for any type of health care, decisions about interventions in the context of natural disasters, conflict, and other major healthcare emergencies must be guided by the best possible evidence.

Disaster health interventions and decision making can benefit from an evidence-based approach.

We outline how systematic reviews and methodologically sound research can build a much-needed evidence base.

We do this from the standpoint of Evidence Aid, an initiative that aims to improve access to evidence on the effects of interventions, actions, and policies before, during, and after disasters and other humanitarian emergencies, so as to improve health-related outcomes.

Authors

Martin Gerdin, Mike Clarke, Claire Allen, Bonnix Kayabu, William Summerskill, Declan Devane, Malcolm MacLachlan, Paul Spiegel, Anjan Ghosh, Rony Zachariah, Saurabh Gupta, Virginia Barbour, Virginia Murray, Johan von Schreeb.