Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2023 Jan 7;23(1):15. doi: 10.1186/s12888-022-04512-y.
Vaccination is an essential public health intervention to reduce morbidity and mortality from infectious diseases. Despite being at higher at risk of infectious diseases, health inequalities towards vaccine uptake in people with mental health issues have not been systematically appraised.
We searched 7 databases from 1994 to 26/03/2021. We included all studies with a relative measure of effect comparing a group with a mental health issue to a control group. All studies covering any mental health issue were eligible with no constraints to study population, vaccine type or region, provided in a high-income country for comparability of health care systems. The study outcomes were synthesised by study population, mental health issue and type of vaccine.
From 4,069 titles, 23 eligible studies from 12 different countries were identified, focusing on adults (n = 13) or children (n = 4) with mental health issues, siblings of children with mental health issues (n = 2), and mothers with mental health issue and vaccine uptake in their children (n = 6). Most studies focused on depression (n = 12), autism, anxiety, or alcoholism (n = 4 respectively). Many studies were at high risk of selection bias.
Mental health issues were associated with considerably lower vaccine uptake in some contexts such as substance use disorder, but findings were heterogeneous overall and by age, mental health issue or types of vaccine. Only individuals with mental health issues and physical comorbidities had consistently higher uptake in comparison to other adults. Mental health should be considered as a health inequality for vaccine uptake but more context specific research is needed focusing more on specific mental health issues and subgroups of the population to understand who misses vaccination and why.
接种疫苗是减少传染病发病率和死亡率的重要公共卫生干预措施。尽管精神健康问题患者面临更高的传染病风险,但针对他们的疫苗接种率的健康不平等问题尚未得到系统评估。
我们从 1994 年至 2021 年 3 月 26 日检索了 7 个数据库。我们纳入了所有比较精神健康问题组与对照组的相对效应测量的研究。所有研究均涵盖任何精神健康问题,且对研究人群、疫苗类型或地区没有限制,纳入的研究均来自高收入国家,以比较医疗保健系统。研究结果按研究人群、精神健康问题和疫苗类型进行综合。
从 4069 篇标题中,确定了来自 12 个不同国家的 23 项符合条件的研究,研究对象聚焦于有精神健康问题的成年人(n=13)或儿童(n=4)、有精神健康问题儿童的兄弟姐妹(n=2)以及有精神健康问题的母亲及其子女的疫苗接种率(n=6)。大多数研究关注抑郁(n=12)、自闭症、焦虑或酗酒(n=4 分别)。许多研究存在选择偏倚的高风险。
在某些情况下,如物质使用障碍,精神健康问题与疫苗接种率明显降低有关,但总体而言,研究结果存在异质性,且按年龄、精神健康问题或疫苗类型而异。只有同时患有精神健康问题和身体合并症的个体与其他成年人相比,疫苗接种率始终更高。精神健康应被视为疫苗接种率的健康不平等因素,但需要进行更多针对特定精神健康问题和人群亚组的具体情况研究,以了解谁错过了疫苗接种以及原因。