School of Optometry and Vision Science, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
International Centre for Eye Health, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2020 Jun 3;10(6):e033775. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033775.
For many people, settling in a new country is associated with a new identity as an 'ethnic minority', one that can remain through future generations. People who are culturally distinct from the dominant population group may experience a variety of barriers to accessing healthcare, including linguistic and cultural barriers in communication, navigation of an unfamiliar health system and unconscious or overt discrimination. Here, we outline the protocol of a scoping review to identify, describe and summarise interventions aimed at improving access to eye care for non-Indigenous, non-dominant ethnic groups residing in high-income countries.
We will search MEDLINE, Embase and Global Health from their inception to July 2019. We will include studies of any design that describe an intervention to promote access to eye care for non-Indigenous, non-dominant ethnic groups. Two authors will independently review titles, abstracts and full-text articles for inclusion. Reference lists from all included articles will also be searched. In cases of disagreement between initial reviewers, a third author will help resolve the conflict. For each included article, we will extract data about the target population, details of the intervention delivered and the effectiveness of or feedback from the intervention. Overall findings will be summarised with descriptive statistics and thematic analysis.
This review will summarise existing literature and as such ethics approval is not required. We will publish the review in an open-access, peer-reviewed journal, and draft appropriate summaries for dissemination to the wider community. This wider community could include clinicians, policymakers, health service managers and organisations that work with non-dominant ethnic groups. Our findings will also feed into the ongoing Lancet Global Health Commission on Global Eye Health.
对许多人来说,在一个新的国家定居意味着他们成为了一个“少数民族”,这种身份可能会延续到后代。与主流人群在文化上有明显差异的人在获得医疗保健方面可能会遇到各种障碍,包括语言和文化交流障碍、不熟悉的医疗体系以及无意识或明显的歧视。在这里,我们概述了一个范围综述的方案,旨在确定、描述和总结旨在改善居住在高收入国家的非土著、非主导少数民族群体获得眼科护理的干预措施。
我们将从其开始到 2019 年 7 月在 MEDLINE、Embase 和全球卫生中进行搜索。我们将包括任何描述促进非土著、非主导少数民族群体获得眼科护理的干预措施的设计研究。两名作者将独立审查标题、摘要和全文文章以进行纳入。所有纳入文章的参考文献列表也将进行搜索。如果最初的审查者之间存在分歧,将由第三名作者帮助解决冲突。对于每个纳入的文章,我们将提取有关目标人群、干预措施细节以及干预措施的有效性或反馈的数据。总体发现将用描述性统计和主题分析进行总结。
本综述将总结现有文献,因此不需要伦理批准。我们将在开放获取、同行评议的期刊上发表综述,并为更广泛的社区起草适当的摘要进行传播。更广泛的社区可能包括临床医生、政策制定者、卫生服务管理人员和与非主导少数民族合作的组织。我们的研究结果还将为正在进行的柳叶刀全球健康委员会的全球眼部健康研究提供信息。