Malmö Institute for Studies of Migration, Diversity and Welfare, Malmö University, Malmö, Sweden.
Médecins Sans Frontières, Geneva, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 16;14(1):e0210071. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210071. eCollection 2019.
Armed conflicts affect more than one in 10 children globally. While there is a large literature on mental health, the effects of armed conflict on children's physical health and development are not well understood. This systematic review summarizes the current and past knowledge on the effects of armed conflict on child health and development.
A systematic review was performed with searches in major and regional databases for papers published 1 January 1945 to 25 April 2017. Included studies provided data on physical and/or developmental outcomes associated with armed conflict in children under 18 years. Data were extracted on health outcomes, displacement, social isolation, experience of violence, orphan status, and access to basic needs. The review is registered with PROSPERO: CRD42017036425.
Among 17,679 publications screened, 155 were eligible for inclusion. Nearly half of the 131 quantitative studies were case reports, chart or registry reviews, and one-third were cross-sectional studies. Additionally, 18 qualitative and 6 mixed-methods studies were included. The papers describe mortality, injuries, illnesses, environmental exposures, limitations in access to health care and education, and the experience of violence, including torture and sexual violence. Studies also described conflict-related social changes affecting child health. The geographical coverage of the literature is limited. Data on the effects of conflict on child development are scarce.
The available data document the pervasive effect of conflict as a form of violence against children and a negative social determinant of child health. There is an urgent need for research on the mechanisms by which conflict affects child health and development and the relationship between physical health, mental health, and social conditions. Particular priority should be given to studies on child development, the long term effects of exposure to conflict, and protective and mitigating factors against the harmful effects of armed conflict on children.
武装冲突影响全球十分之一以上的儿童。尽管有大量关于心理健康的文献,但武装冲突对儿童身体健康和发育的影响尚未得到充分了解。本系统综述总结了目前和过去关于武装冲突对儿童健康和发育影响的知识。
对主要和区域数据库进行了系统检索,检索时间为 1945 年 1 月 1 日至 2017 年 4 月 25 日,以获取有关 18 岁以下儿童与武装冲突相关的身体和/或发育结果的论文。纳入的研究提供了有关健康结果、流离失所、社会隔离、暴力经历、孤儿身份和基本需求获得情况的数据。该综述在 PROSPERO 注册:CRD42017036425。
在筛选的 17679 篇论文中,有 155 篇符合纳入标准。在 131 篇定量研究中,近一半为病例报告、图表或登记处综述,三分之一为横断面研究。此外,还纳入了 18 篇定性研究和 6 篇混合方法研究。这些论文描述了死亡率、伤害、疾病、环境暴露、获得医疗保健和教育的机会受限以及暴力经历,包括酷刑和性暴力。研究还描述了影响儿童健康的与冲突相关的社会变化。文献的地理覆盖范围有限。关于冲突对儿童发育影响的数据稀缺。
现有数据记录了冲突作为一种针对儿童的暴力形式以及儿童健康的负面社会决定因素的普遍影响。迫切需要研究冲突影响儿童健康和发育的机制以及身体健康、心理健康和社会条件之间的关系。应特别优先考虑关于儿童发育、暴露于冲突的长期影响以及针对武装冲突对儿童的有害影响的保护和缓解因素的研究。