Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Strategic Information and Evaluation, Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, Geneva, Switzerland.
Syst Rev. 2018 Dec 3;7(1):220. doi: 10.1186/s13643-018-0894-3.
Key populations who bear a disproportionate burden of HIV, including female sex workers, men who have sex with men, people who use drugs, transgender people, and incarcerated populations, have been understudied, especially in the context of broadly generalized HIV epidemics. Program and investment planning documents often do not take into account the data that do exist. Prior systematic reviews have been comprehensive, but lack sustainability and relevance over time. This review aims to synthesize all available data for key populations and present the data through an accessible, updatable user-friendly graphic interface. The outputs of this systematic review will serve as a resource for decision-makers, providing government stakeholders and donors with the tools to make evidence-based decisions for national planning.
We will conduct a systematic review of data published or made available between January 1, 2006, and January 1, 2019, that captures the burden of HIV, both prevalence and incidence estimates, HIV prevention and treatment cascades, key population size estimates, experienced violence, consistent condom use, and engagement with healthcare systems for female sex workers, men who have sex with men, people who use drugs, transgender people, and incarcerated populations. A team of reviewers will use Covidence to conduct two independent reviews of both title/abstract and full text for each article. REDCap will be used for data abstraction and storage.
Findings from this systematic review and the development of the enhanced graphical interface to display data, along with ongoing efforts to build capacity among key stakeholders to better use and interpret available data, will help ensure that available epidemiologic data related to key populations can be appropriately used to guide large-scale HIV funding and programmatic responses.
PROPSERO CRD42016047259 .
包括女性性工作者、男男性行为者、吸毒者、跨性别者和被监禁者在内的关键人群感染艾滋病的负担不成比例,他们的研究较少,尤其是在广泛流行艾滋病的情况下。规划和投资文件通常没有考虑到现有的数据。先前的系统评价虽然全面,但随着时间的推移缺乏可持续性和相关性。本次审查旨在综合所有现有数据,以易于访问和更新的用户友好图形界面呈现数据。该系统评价的结果将作为决策者的资源,为政府利益攸关方和捐助者提供工具,以便为国家规划做出基于证据的决策。
我们将对 2006 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 1 月 1 日期间发表或提供的数据进行系统评价,这些数据涵盖了艾滋病的负担,包括流行率和发病率估计、艾滋病预防和治疗环节、关键人群规模估计、经历过的暴力、坚持使用安全套以及医疗保健系统的参与情况,对象为女性性工作者、男男性行为者、吸毒者、跨性别者和被监禁者。一个审查小组将使用 Covidence 对每篇文章的标题/摘要和全文进行独立的两次审查。数据抽象和存储将使用 REDCap 进行。
本次系统评价的结果以及开发增强图形界面来显示数据,以及正在努力提高关键利益攸关方使用和解释现有数据的能力,将有助于确保与关键人群相关的现有流行病学数据能够得到适当利用,从而指导大规模艾滋病资金和方案应对。
PROPSERO CRD42016047259。