Health Sciences Research Institute, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, (CV4 7AL), UK.
BMC Pediatr. 2011 Dec 21;11:119. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-11-119.
The majority of children with disability live in low and middle income (LAMI) countries. Although a number of important reviews of childhood disability in LAMI countries have been published, these have not, to our knowledge, addressed the association between childhood disability and the home socio-economic circumstances (SEC). The objective of this study is to establish the current state of knowledge on the SECs of children with disability and their households in LAMI countries through a systematic review and quality assessment of existing research.
Electronic databases (MEDLINE; EMBASE; PUBMED; Web of Knowledge; PsycInfo; ASSIA; Virtual Health Library; POPLINE; Google scholar) were searched using terms specific to childhood disability and SECs in LAMI countries. Publications from organisations including the World Bank, UNICEF, International Monetary Fund were searched for. Primary studies and reviews from 1990 onwards were included. Studies were assessed for inclusion, categorisation and quality by 2 researchers.
24 primary studies and 13 reviews were identified. Evidence from the available literature on the association between childhood disability and SECs was inconsistent and inconclusive. Potential mechanisms by which poverty and low household SEC may be both a cause and consequence of disability are outlined in the reviews and the qualitative studies. The association of poor SECs with learning disability and behaviour problems was the most consistent finding and these studies had low/medium risk of bias. Where overall disability was the outcome of interest, findings were divergent and many studies had a high/medium risk of bias. Qualitative studies were methodologically weak.
This review indicates that, despite socially and biologically plausible mechanisms underlying the association of low household SEC with childhood disability in LAMI countries, the empirical evidence from quantitative studies is inconsistent and contradictory. There is evidence for a bidirectional association of low household SEC and disability and longitudinal data is needed to clarify the nature of this association.
大多数残疾儿童生活在中低收入(LAMI)国家。尽管已经发表了一些关于 LAMI 国家儿童残疾的重要综述,但据我们所知,这些综述并未涉及儿童残疾与家庭社会经济环境(SEC)之间的关系。本研究的目的是通过系统评价和质量评估现有研究,确定 LAMI 国家残疾儿童及其家庭的 SEC 现状。
使用特定于 LAMI 国家儿童残疾和 SEC 的术语,在电子数据库(MEDLINE;EMBASE;PUBMED;Web of Knowledge;PsycInfo;ASSIA;虚拟健康图书馆;POPLINE;Google scholar)中进行搜索。还搜索了世界银行、儿基会、国际货币基金组织等组织的出版物。纳入了 1990 年以后的原始研究和综述。由两名研究人员评估纳入、分类和质量。
确定了 24 项原始研究和 13 项综述。现有文献中关于儿童残疾与 SEC 之间关系的证据不一致且无定论。综述和定性研究中概述了贫困和家庭 SEC 低下可能既是残疾的原因又是残疾的后果的潜在机制。贫困 SEC 与学习障碍和行为问题之间的关联是最一致的发现,这些研究的偏倚风险低/中。当总体残疾是感兴趣的结果时,结果是不同的,许多研究的偏倚风险高/中。定性研究在方法上较为薄弱。
本综述表明,尽管 LAMI 国家中家庭 SEC 低下与儿童残疾之间存在有社会和生物学上合理的关联机制,但来自定量研究的实证证据不一致且相互矛盾。有证据表明,家庭 SEC 低下与残疾之间存在双向关联,需要纵向数据来阐明这种关联的性质。