Janjua Naveed Zafar, Butt Zahid Ahmad, Mahmood Bushra, Altaf Arshad
Naveed Zafar Janjua, Clinical Prevention Services, British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4R4, Canada.
World J Gastroenterol. 2016 Jul 7;22(25):5837-52. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i25.5837.
To summarize the available information about injection use and its determinants in the South Asian region.
We searched published and unpublished literature on injection safety in South Asia published during 1995-2016 using the keywords "injection" "unsafe injection" and "immunization injection" and combined these with each of the countries and/or their respective states or provinces in South Asia. We used a standardized questionnaire to abstract the following data from the articles: the annual number of injections per capita, the proportion of injections administered with a reused syringe or needle, the distribution of injections with respect to prescribers and providers and determinants of injection use.
Although information is very limited for certain countries (i.e., Bhutan, Maldives and Sri Lanka), healthcare injection use is very common across South Asia, with cross-country rates ranging from 2.4 to 13.6 injections/person/year. Furthermore, recent studies show that 5% to 50% of these injections are provided with reused syringes, thus creating potential to transmission of blood-borne pathogens. Qualified and unqualified practitioners, especially in the private sector, are the major drivers behind injection use, but patients also prefer injections, especially among the rural, poor or uneducated in certain countries. According to available data, Pakistan and India have recently taken steps towards achieving safe injection. Potential interventions include the introduction of reuse prevention devices, and patient-, community- and patient/community and provider-centered interventions to change population and practitioner behavior.
Injection use is common in South Asian countries. Multilevel interventions aiming at patients, providers and the healthcare system are needed to reduce injection use and reuse.
总结南亚地区注射使用情况及其影响因素的现有信息。
我们检索了1995年至2016年期间发表的关于南亚注射安全的已发表和未发表文献,使用关键词“注射”“不安全注射”和“免疫接种注射”,并将这些与南亚的每个国家和/或其各自的邦或省相结合。我们使用标准化问卷从文章中提取以下数据:人均每年注射次数、使用重复使用注射器或针头进行注射的比例、注射在开处方者和提供者方面的分布情况以及注射使用的影响因素。
尽管某些国家(即不丹、马尔代夫和斯里兰卡)的信息非常有限,但医疗注射在南亚非常普遍,各国每年人均注射次数在2.4至13.6次之间。此外,最近的研究表明,这些注射中有5%至50%是使用重复使用的注射器进行的,因此存在血源性病原体传播的潜在风险。合格和不合格的从业者,尤其是在私营部门,是注射使用的主要驱动因素,但患者也更喜欢注射,特别是在某些国家的农村、贫困或未受过教育的人群中。根据现有数据,巴基斯坦和印度最近已采取措施实现安全注射。潜在的干预措施包括引入防止重复使用的装置,以及以患者、社区以及患者/社区和提供者为中心的干预措施,以改变人群和从业者的行为。
注射在南亚国家很常见。需要针对患者、提供者和医疗系统进行多层次干预,以减少注射使用和重复使用。