ARTICLE TYPE : REVIEW ARTICLE
Published on : 31 Jan 2026, Volume - 2
Journal Title : WebLog Journal of Emergency Medicine | WebLog J Emerg Med
Source URL:
https://weblogoa.com/articles/wjem.2026.a3101
Permanent Identifier (DOI) :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18489746
The Burning Global Issues in Emergency Medicine: A Narrative Review
2Department of Pediatric Surgery, PGICHR and KTCGUH, Rajkot 360001, Gujarat, India
3Care Gastroenterology Medical Group, California, USA
4Department of Pediatric Surgery, Nottingham University Hospitals, Nottingham, UK
5J. Watumull Global Hospital & Research Centre, Delwara Road, Mount Abu, Rajasthan 307501, India Affiliated to Medical Faculty of God Fatherly Spiritual University, Mount Abu, Rajasthan, India
Abstract
Objectives: To synthesise and critically examine the most urgent global challenges facing Emergency Medicine (EM), including system pressures, workforce vulnerabilities, climate‑related threats, conflict‑driven emergencies, infectious disease risks, inequities in access, and gaps in digital and research capacity. The review aims to identify cross‑cutting determinants and propose system‑level strategies to strengthen resilience and equity in emergency care worldwide.
Design: Narrative review.
Methods: A thematic narrative review was conducted using literature from PubMed, WHO and UN agency reports, global emergency medicine organisations, and international policy documents. Sources were selected for relevance to global emergency care, with emphasis on Low and Middle‑Income Countries (LMICs). Themes were identified through iterative synthesis and conceptual mapping.
Results:
Ten major global issues emerged:
- Emergency department overcrowding and access block, driven by rising demand, inadequate inpatient capacity, and weak primary care integration.
- Workforce shortages and burnout, exacerbated by migration, violence against healthcare workers, and gender inequities.
- Climate change, contributing to heat‑related illness, extreme weather events, and shifting disease patterns.
- Conflict, displacement, and humanitarian crises, increasing trauma burden and complex emergency needs.
- Infectious disease threats and antimicrobial resistance, revealing persistent gaps in preparedness and stewardship.
- Rising non‑communicable disease burden, increasing demand for time‑critical interventions.
- Digital transformation gaps, including inequitable access to digital tools and concerns around AI ethics and cybersecurity.
- Prehospital care deficiencies, particularly in LMICs lacking organised EMS systems.
- Financial and structural inequities, limiting timely access to emergency care.
- Global research disparities, with LMICs under‑represented in EM research and clinical trials.
Conclusions: Emergency medicine is at a pivotal moment, shaped by converging global pressures that threaten system capacity, equity, and resilience. Addressing these challenges requires coordinated investment in infrastructure, workforce protection, climate‑resilient systems, equitable digital innovation, and strengthened global research capacity. Emergency care must evolve from a reactive service to a proactive, system‑shaping discipline central to global health security.
Keywords: Emergency Medicine; Global Health; Health Systems; Emergency Department Overcrowding; Access Block; Workforce Burnout; Climate Change and Health; Humanitarian Emergencies; Conflict and Displacement; Infectious Disease Preparedness; Antimicrobial Resistance; Non‑Communicable Diseases; Prehospital Care; Emergency Medical Services (EMS); Health Inequities; Digital Health; Global Research Capacity; Low and Middle‑Income Countries (LMICs)
Citation
Zaparackaite I, Govani ND, Singh H, Singh SJ, Mehta AR, Midha PK, et al. The Burning Global Issues in Emergency Medicine: A Narrative Review. WebLog J Emerg Med. wjem.2026.a3101. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18489746