López-Alcalde Jesús, Stallings Elena, Cabir Nunes Sheila, Fernández Chávez Abelardo, Daheron Mathilde, Bonfill Cosp Xavier, Zamora Javier
Department of Paediatrics, Obstetrics & Gynaecology and Preventative Medicine, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Faculty of Health Sciences, Universidad Francisco de Vitoria (UFV)-Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2019 Mar 15;19(1):169. doi: 10.1186/s12913-019-4001-9.
Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) are common and increase morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs. Their control continues to be an unresolved issue worldwide. HAIs epidemiology shows sex/gender differences. Thus the lack of consideration of sex/gender in Cochrane reviews will limit their applicability and capacity to support informed decisions. This study aims to describe the extent to which Cochrane reviews of interventions for preventing HAIs consider sex and gender.
Methodology study appraising Cochrane reviews of interventions to prevent HAIs.
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews from 1995 (launch of the journal) to 31 December 2016. Two authors independently extracted data with EPPI-Reviewer 4 software, and independently appraised the sex/gender content of the reviews with the Sex and Gender Appraisal Tool for Systematic Reviews (SGAT-SR).
This study included 113 reviews assessing the effects of interventions for preventing HAIs. 100 reviews (88%) used at least one sex or gender-related term. The terminology used was heterogeneous, being "sex" the term used in more reviews (51%). No review defined neither sex nor gender. Thus we could not assess the definitions provided. Consideration of sex and gender was practically absent in the included reviews; in fact, no review met all the applicable items of the SGAT-SR, and 51 reviews (50%) fulfilled no item. No review provided a complete description of the sex and the gender of the samples of the included studies. Only ten reviews (10%) planned to perform sex- and gender-based analysis and only three (3%) could complete the analysis. The method chosen was always the subgroup analysis based on sex (one review) or gender (two reviews). Three reviews (3%) considered sex or gender-related findings in the conclusions.
Consideration of sex and gender in Cochrane reviews of interventions for preventing HAIs was practically absent. This lack of attention to sex and gender reduces the quality of Cochrane reviews, and their applicability for all people: women and men, boys and girls, and people of diverse gender identities. Cochrane should attempt to address the shortfalls detected.
医疗保健相关感染(HAIs)很常见,会增加发病率、死亡率和医疗成本。对其控制在全球范围内仍是一个未解决的问题。HAIs的流行病学显示出性别差异。因此,Cochrane系统评价中未考虑性别因素将限制其适用性以及支持明智决策的能力。本研究旨在描述Cochrane关于预防HAIs干预措施的系统评价在多大程度上考虑了性别因素。
对Cochrane关于预防HAIs干预措施的系统评价进行方法学研究。
检索Cochrane系统评价数据库,时间范围从1995年(该期刊创刊)至2016年12月31日。两位作者使用EPPI-Reviewer 4软件独立提取数据,并使用系统评价的性别评估工具(SGAT-SR)独立评估系统评价中的性别内容。
本研究纳入了113篇评估预防HAIs干预措施效果的系统评价。100篇(88%)至少使用了一个与性别相关的术语。所使用的术语各不相同,使用“性别”一词的系统评价更多(51%)。没有系统评价对性别进行定义。因此,我们无法评估所提供的定义。纳入的系统评价几乎没有考虑性别因素;事实上,没有一篇系统评价满足SGAT-SR的所有适用条目,51篇(50%)一个条目都未满足。没有系统评价对纳入研究样本的性别进行完整描述。只有十篇(10%)计划进行基于性别的分析,只有三篇(3%)能够完成分析。所选择的方法始终是基于性别的亚组分析(一篇基于性别,两篇基于性别)。三篇(3%)系统评价在结论中考虑了与性别相关的研究结果。
Cochrane关于预防HAIs干预措施的系统评价几乎没有考虑性别因素。这种对性别的忽视降低了Cochrane系统评价的质量及其对所有人(包括男性和女性、男孩和女孩以及不同性别认同的人)的适用性。Cochrane应试图解决所发现的不足。