Balabanski Anna H, Dos Santos Angela, Woods John A, Thrift Amanda G, Kleinig Timothy J, Suchy-Dicey Astrid, Siri Susanna Ragnhild, Boden-Albala Bernadette, Krishnamurthi Rita, Feigin Valery L, Buchwald Dedra, Ranta Annemarei, Mienna Christina S, Zavaleta Carol, Churilov Leonid, Burchill Luke, Zion Deborah, Longstreth W T, Tirschwell David L, Anand Sonia, Parsons Mark W, Brown Alex, Warne Donald K, Harwood Matire, Katzenellenbogen Judith M
Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash Universit, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Department of Medicine and Neurology, Melbourne Brain Centre at Royal Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Front Neurol. 2021 Apr 22;12:661570. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2021.661570. eCollection 2021.
Despite known Indigenous health and socioeconomic disadvantage in countries with a Very High Human Development Index, data on the incidence of stroke in these populations are sparse. With oversight from an Indigenous Advisory Board, we will undertake a systematic review of the incidence of stroke in Indigenous populations of developed countries or regions, with comparisons between Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations of the same region, though not between different Indigenous populations. Using PubMed, OVID-EMBASE, and Global Health databases, we will examine population-based incidence studies of stroke in Indigenous adult populations of developed countries published 1990-current, without language restriction. Non-peer-reviewed sources, studies including <10 Indigenous People, or with insufficient data to determine incidence, will be excluded. Two reviewers will independently validate the search strategies, screen titles and abstracts, and record reasons for rejection. Relevant articles will undergo full-text screening, with standard data extracted for all studies included. Quality assessment will include Sudlow and Warlow's criteria for population-based stroke incidence studies, the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale for risk of bias, and the CONSIDER checklist for Indigenous research. Primary outcomes include crude, age-specific and/or age-standardized incidence of stroke. Secondary outcomes include overall stroke rates, incidence rate ratio and case-fatality. Results will be synthesized in figures and tables, describing data sources, populations, methodology, and findings. Within-population meta-analysis will be performed if, and where, methodologically sound and comparable studies allow this. We will undertake the first systematic review assessing disparities in stroke incidence in Indigenous populations of developed countries. Data outputs will be disseminated to relevant Indigenous stakeholders to inform public health and policy research.
尽管在人类发展指数非常高的国家中,已知原住民在健康和社会经济方面处于不利地位,但关于这些人群中风发病率的数据却很稀少。在一个原住民咨询委员会的监督下,我们将对发达国家或地区原住民人群的中风发病率进行系统综述,比较同一地区原住民和非原住民人群之间的情况,但不比较不同原住民人群之间的情况。我们将使用PubMed、OVID-EMBASE和全球健康数据库,检索1990年至今发表的关于发达国家原住民成年人群中风的基于人群的发病率研究,不限语言。非同行评审来源、研究对象少于10名原住民或数据不足以确定发病率的研究将被排除。两名评审员将独立验证检索策略、筛选标题和摘要,并记录排除原因。对相关文章进行全文筛选,提取所有纳入研究的标准数据。质量评估将包括Sudlow和Warlow关于基于人群的中风发病率研究的标准、纽卡斯尔-渥太华偏倚风险量表以及原住民研究的CONSIDER清单。主要结果包括中风的粗发病率、年龄特异性发病率和/或年龄标准化发病率。次要结果包括总体中风率、发病率比和病死率。结果将以图表形式综合呈现,描述数据来源、人群、方法和研究结果。如果在方法上合理且有可比研究的情况下,将进行人群内荟萃分析。我们将进行首次系统综述,评估发达国家原住民人群中风发病率的差异。数据结果将分发给相关的原住民利益相关者,为公共卫生和政策研究提供信息。