Department of Experimental Medicine, University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli", Naples, Italy.
Department of Public Health and Policy, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
J Travel Med. 2019 Oct 14;26(7). doi: 10.1093/jtm/taz067.
Older travellers are at higher risk of malaria-related morbidity and mortality compared with younger people. Yet, prevention of malaria in this specific group of travellers is a long-standing issue in travel medicine. The aim of this research was to synthetize the existing evidence about this important topic, highlighting older travellers' attitudes and practises toward malaria prevention. Searches were performed on PubMed, Embase, EuropePMC, Web of Science, WHOLIS and LILACS databases for relevant studies reporting malaria prevention measures in older travellers. To measure malaria prevention in the older traveller population, the main information outcomes were obtained from the ABCD framework that included travellers' 'Awareness' towards pre-travel health advice, their utilisation of 'Bite-prevention measures' and adherence to 'Chemoprophylaxis'. Data on 'Diagnosis'-related outcomes were excluded for not being measures of malaria prevention. Three evaluators independently selected studies, extracted data and assessed the quality of the included articles. The research protocol was registered with PROSPERO (protocol number CRD42019124202). Out of the 899 titles and abstracts screened, 13 articles were included in this review synthesis. These studies included a wide range of interventions for malaria prevention: no relevant differences in pre-travel healthcare attendance were found depending on age; older travellers were found to be less likely to comply with bite-prevention measures; three high-quality studies reported that adherence to chemoprophylaxis significantly increased with age, while three studies did not find age-related differences in travellers' adherence. Overall, prevention of malaria in the older traveller has received limited attention from the scientific community. Older travellers seem to be less likely to comply with bite-prevention measures, but there was high heterogeneity across the reports. This population group demands particular attention and tailored health advice before travelling to malaria endemic areas. More research is required on how to improve malaria prevention in the older traveller.
与年轻人相比,老年旅行者患疟疾相关疾病和死亡的风险更高。然而,在旅行医学中,预防这一特定群体旅行者的疟疾一直是一个长期存在的问题。本研究的目的是综合现有关于这一重要主题的证据,强调老年旅行者对疟疾预防的态度和做法。在 PubMed、Embase、EuropePMC、Web of Science、WHOLIS 和 LILACS 数据库中搜索了有关老年旅行者预防疟疾措施的相关研究。为了衡量老年旅行者的疟疾预防情况,从“ABCD 框架”中获取了主要信息结果,该框架包括旅行者对旅行前健康建议的“意识”、他们对“防叮咬措施”的利用以及对“化学预防”的遵守情况。由于不被视为疟疾预防措施,因此排除了与“诊断”相关的结果数据。三名评估员独立选择研究、提取数据并评估纳入文章的质量。该研究方案已在 PROSPERO(方案编号 CRD42019124202)中注册。在筛选出的 899 篇标题和摘要中,有 13 篇文章被纳入本综述综合分析。这些研究包括各种预防疟疾的干预措施:根据年龄,旅行前医疗保健就诊情况没有明显差异;研究发现,老年旅行者更不可能遵守防叮咬措施;三项高质量研究报告称,随着年龄的增长,化学预防的依从性显著增加,而三项研究未发现旅行者的依从性与年龄有关。总体而言,科学界对老年旅行者的疟疾预防关注有限。老年旅行者似乎更不可能遵守防叮咬措施,但报告之间存在高度异质性。这一人群在前往疟疾流行地区之前需要特别关注和量身定制的健康建议。需要进一步研究如何改善老年旅行者的疟疾预防。