Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; British Columbia Mental Health and Substance Use Services Research Institute, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
British Columbia Mental Health and Substance Use Services Research Institute, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Lancet Public Health. 2020 Jan;5(1):e19-e32. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(19)30188-4. Epub 2019 Dec 2.
Homelessness is a global public health concern, and traumatic brain injury (TBI) could represent an underappreciated factor in the health trajectories of homeless and marginally housed individuals. We aimed to evaluate the lifetime prevalence of TBI in this population, and to summarise findings on TBI incidence and the association between TBI and health-related or functioning-related outcomes.
For this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched without date restrictions for original research studies in English that reported data on the prevalence or incidence of TBI, or the association between TBI and one or more health-related or function-related outcome measures. Studies were included if they had a group or clearly identifiable subgroup of individuals who were homeless, marginally housed, or seeking services for homeless people. With use of random-effects models, we calculated pooled estimates of the lifetime prevalence of any severity of TBI and the lifetime prevalence of moderate or severe TBI. We used meta-regression and subgroup analysis to evaluate potential moderators of prevalence estimates and the leave-one-out method for sensitivity analyses. We then summarised findings from all studies that evaluated TBI incidence and the association between TBI and health-related or functioning-related outcomes. All statistical analyses were done using R version 3.5.1. The study is registered with PROSPERO, number CRD42019119678.
Of 463 potentially eligible studies identified by the search, 38 studies were included in the systematic review and 22 studies were included in the meta-analysis. The lifetime prevalence of any severity of TBI in homeless and marginally housed individuals (18 studies, n=9702 individuals) was 53·1% (95% CI 46·4-59·7; I=97%) and the lifetime prevalence of moderate or severe TBI (nine studies, n=5787) was 22·5% (13·5-35·0; I=99%). The method used to ascertain TBI history, the age of the sample, and the sample size significantly moderated estimated lifetime prevalence of any severity of TBI. TBI was consistently associated with poorer self-reported physical and mental health, higher suicidality and suicide risk, memory concerns, and increased health service use and criminal justice system involvement.
The lifetime prevalence of TBI is high among homeless and marginally housed individuals, and a history of TBI is associated with poorer health and general functioning. Health-care providers and public health officials should have an increased awareness of the burden of TBI in this population. Prospective and longitudinal studies are needed to better understand how the health of this population is affected by TBI.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
无家可归是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,创伤性脑损伤(TBI)可能是无家可归者和边缘居住者健康轨迹中被低估的一个因素。我们旨在评估该人群中 TBI 的终生患病率,并总结 TBI 发生率以及 TBI 与健康相关或功能相关结果之间关联的研究结果。
在这项系统回顾和荟萃分析中,我们没有时间限制地搜索了以英语报告 TBI 患病率或发生率,或 TBI 与一个或多个健康相关或功能相关结果测量之间关联的原始研究。如果研究有一组或明确可识别的无家可归者、边缘居住者或为无家可归者提供服务的个体亚组,则将其纳入研究。我们使用随机效应模型计算了任何严重程度 TBI 的终生患病率和中度或重度 TBI 的终生患病率的汇总估计值。我们使用荟萃回归和亚组分析来评估患病率估计值的潜在调节因素,并使用逐个剔除法进行敏感性分析。然后,我们总结了评估 TBI 发生率以及 TBI 与健康相关或功能相关结果之间关联的所有研究的结果。所有统计分析均使用 R 版本 3.5.1 进行。该研究已在 PROSPERO 注册,编号为 CRD42019119678。
通过搜索确定的 463 项潜在合格研究中,有 38 项研究被纳入系统评价,22 项研究被纳入荟萃分析。无家可归和边缘居住者中任何严重程度 TBI 的终生患病率(18 项研究,n=9702 人)为 53.1%(95%CI 46.4-59.7;I=97%),中度或重度 TBI 的终生患病率(9 项研究,n=5787)为 22.5%(13.5-35.0;I=99%)。TBI 病史的确定方法、样本年龄和样本量显著调节了任何严重程度 TBI 的估计终生患病率。TBI 与自我报告的身体和心理健康状况较差、自杀意念和自杀风险较高、记忆力问题、以及增加卫生服务使用和卷入刑事司法系统有关。
无家可归和边缘居住者中 TBI 的终生患病率较高,TBI 史与较差的健康和一般功能有关。卫生保健提供者和公共卫生官员应更加意识到该人群中 TBI 的负担。需要前瞻性和纵向研究来更好地了解该人群的健康状况如何受到 TBI 的影响。
加拿大卫生研究院。