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The Emergency Medicine Specimen Bank: An Innovative Approach To Biobanking In Acute Care
Author(s) -
Saben Jessica L.,
Shelton Shelby K.,
Hopkinson Andrew J.,
Sonn Brandon J.,
Mills Eleanor B.,
Welham Makayla,
Westmoreland Megan,
Zane Richard,
Ginde Adit A.,
Bookman Kelly,
Oeth Justin,
Chavez Mark,
DeVivo Michael,
Lakin Alison,
Heldens John,
Romero Laurie Blumberg,
Ames Michael J.,
Roberts Emily R.,
Taylor Matthew,
Crooks Kristy,
Wicks Stephen J.,
Barnes Kathleen C.,
Monte Andrew A.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
academic emergency medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.221
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1553-2712
pISSN - 1069-6563
DOI - 10.1111/acem.13620
Subject(s) - biobank , medicine , biorepository , acute care , acute medicine , workflow , psychological intervention , emergency department , medical emergency , patient care , health care , informed consent , medline , family medicine , emergency medicine , intensive care medicine , alternative medicine , nursing , bioinformatics , pathology , management , political science , law , economics , biology , economic growth
The Emergency Medicine Specimen Bank ( EMSB ) was developed to facilitate precision medicine in acute care. The EMSB is a biorepository of clinical health data and biospecimens collected from all adult English‐ or Spanish‐speaking individuals who are able and willing to provide consent and are treated at the UCH ealth–University of Colorado Hospital Emergency Department. The EMSB is the first acute care biobank that seeks to enroll all patients, with all conditions who present to the ED . Acute care biobanking presents many challenges that are unique to acute care settings such as providing informed consent in a uniquely stressful and fast‐paced environment and collecting, processing, and storing samples for tens of thousands of patients per year. Here, we describe the process by which the EMSB overcame these challenges and was integrated into clinical workflow allowing for operation 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at a reasonable cost. Other institutions can implement this template, further increasing the power of biobanking research to inform treatment strategies and interventions for common and uncommon phenotypes in acute care settings.