Background/Objectives: Retrospective projects including audits and observational research advance the practice of emergency medicine but face methodological challenges affecting data quality. This guideline presents an 11-step framework to guide the conduct of high-quality retrospective projects, minimizing bias and enhancing reproducibility for clinicians. Methods: The stepped approach mirrors the standard sections of a study protocol but reframes them as guiding questions to make each section’s content and purpose more practical, intuitive, and clear for users. Conclusions: This framework equips clinicians with a practical entry point to retrospective study design, distilling methodological nuances and strategies to bridge theory and application. Systematic adherence promotes rigor, reduces bias, and elevates retrospective chart review from a convenient tool to a robust method for evaluating practice patterns, interventions, and quality improvement in emergency care. Implementation also fosters a culture of evidence-based inquiry essential to advancing emergency medicine.
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Viet Tran
Emergency Care and Medicine
University of Tasmania
Royal Hobart Hospital
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Viet Tran (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b6069b83145bc643d1ca29 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ecm3010011