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灾难环境下的慢性非传染性疾病系统评价

Systematic review on chronic non-communicable disease in disaster settings.

机构信息

Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale University, 464 Congress Avenue, Suite #260, New Haven, CT, 06519, USA.

Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA.

出版信息

BMC Public Health. 2022 Jun 21;22(1):1234. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13399-z.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) constitute the leading cause of mortality globally. Low and middle-income countries (LMICs) not only experience the largest burden of humanitarian emergencies but are also disproportionately affected by NCDs, yet primary focus on the topic is lagging. We conducted a systematic review on the effect of humanitarian disasters on NCDs in LMICs assessing epidemiology, interventions, and treatment.

METHODS

A systematic search in MEDLINE, MEDLINE (PubMed, for in-process and non-indexed citations), Social Science Citation Index, and Global Health (EBSCO) for indexed articles published before December 11, 2017 was conducted, and publications reporting on NCDs and humanitarian emergencies in LMICs were included. We extracted and synthesized results using a thematic analysis approach and present the results by disease type. The study is registered at PROSPERO (CRD42018088769).

RESULTS

Of the 85 included publications, most reported on observational research studies and almost half (48.9%) reported on studies in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMRO), with scant studies reporting on the African and Americas regions. NCDs represented a significant burden for populations affected by humanitarian crises in our findings, despite a dearth of data from particular regions and disease categories. The majority of studies included in our review presented epidemiologic evidence for the burden of disease, while few studies addressed clinical management or intervention delivery. Commonly cited barriers to healthcare access in all phases of disaster and major disease diagnoses studied included: low levels of education, financial difficulties, displacement, illiteracy, lack of access to medications, affordability of treatment and monitoring devices, and centralized healthcare infrastructure for NCDs. Screening and prevention for NCDs in disaster-prone settings was supported. Refugee status was independently identified both as a risk factor for diagnosis with an NCD and conferring worse morbidity.

CONCLUSIONS

An increased focus on the effects of, and mitigating factors for, NCDs occurring in disaster-afflicted LMICs is needed. While the majority of studies included in our review presented epidemiologic evidence for the burden of disease, research is needed to address contributing factors, interventions, and means of managing disease during humanitarian emergencies in LMICs.

摘要

背景

非传染性疾病(NCDs)是全球范围内导致死亡的主要原因。中低收入国家(LMICs)不仅面临着最大的人道主义紧急情况负担,而且还不成比例地受到 NCDs 的影响,但对这一主题的主要关注却滞后了。我们对人道主义灾难对 LMICs 中 NCDs 的影响进行了系统评价,评估了流行病学、干预措施和治疗方法。

方法

我们对 MEDLINE、MEDLINE(PubMed,收录正在处理和未索引的引文)、社会科学引文索引和 EBSCO 全球健康数据库进行了系统检索,检索时间截至 2017 年 12 月 11 日,收录了报告 LMICs 中 NCD 和人道主义紧急情况的出版物。我们使用主题分析方法提取和综合结果,并按疾病类型呈现结果。该研究已在 PROSPERO(CRD42018088769)注册。

结果

在 85 篇纳入的文献中,大多数报告了观察性研究,近一半(48.9%)报告了东地中海区域(EMRO)的研究,而关于非洲和美洲区域的研究则很少。在我们的研究中,尽管来自特定区域和疾病类别的数据匮乏,但 NCD 仍然是受人道主义危机影响人群的一个重要负担。我们的综述中纳入的大多数研究提供了疾病负担的流行病学证据,而很少有研究涉及临床管理或干预措施的提供。在灾难的所有阶段和研究的主要疾病诊断中,普遍提到的获得医疗保健的障碍包括:教育水平低、经济困难、流离失所、文盲、无法获得药物、治疗和监测设备的可负担性以及 NCD 集中的医疗基础设施。在易受灾地区,对 NCD 进行筛查和预防得到了支持。难民身份被独立确定为 NCD 诊断的一个风险因素,并导致更严重的发病率。

结论

需要更加关注灾害影响 LMICs 中 NCDs 的因素和减轻这些因素的措施。虽然我们综述中纳入的大多数研究提供了疾病负担的流行病学证据,但需要研究来解决中低收入国家人道主义紧急情况下的发病因素、干预措施和管理疾病的方法。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/75a2/9210736/17e1ffc2a66d/12889_2022_13399_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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