Nair Vasundharaa S, Thomas Priya Treesa, Netravathi M
Department of Psychiatric Social Work, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
Department of Neurology, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
Indian J Community Med. 2022 Oct-Dec;47(4):495-500. doi: 10.4103/ijcm.ijcm_321_22. Epub 2022 Dec 14.
Brain infections are serious neurological events that require immediate care, with around 171 districts of 19 states in India reporting cases every year. Along with the biomedical factors, psychosocial factors of health (BPS) are influential in the outcomes of brain infections as well.
A scoping review was conducted to understand the psychosocial factors explored in brain infections in the last decade. Articles focusing on social, psychological, public health factors, sequelae, and rehabilitation of inflammatory conditions, both pathogenic and autoimmune were covered. The search was conducted using keywords related to brain infections in electronic databases: PubMed, EBSCO, ProQuest, Scopus, and Google Scholar. Prisma-ScR guidelines were used to screen articles and the identified factors were categorized under eight psychosocial factors using Arksey and O'Malley's framework of analysis.
From a total of 6012 documents retrieved, 11 articles met the criteria. Global burden associated with brain infections, disability and death, the vulnerable population at risk of developing brain infections, gaps in existing literature, pathways to care, mental health, cognitive difficulty associated with infections and their sequelae were the major psychosocial factors identified.
The review focussed to understand the multitude of psychosocial factors causing delay and damage in brain infections in LMIC context. Along with biomedical factors, there exist several psychosocial factors that could potentially influence the outcome of treatment in brain infections. However, only few have been explored, suggesting the need for more studies to inform the care and sustainable interventions at the macro level to improve the outcomes and reduce the burden in brain infections.
脑部感染是严重的神经学事件,需要立即治疗,印度19个邦约171个地区每年都有病例报告。除生物医学因素外,健康的社会心理因素(BPS)对脑部感染的结果也有影响。
进行了一项范围综述,以了解过去十年中在脑部感染研究中探讨的社会心理因素。涵盖了关注社会、心理、公共卫生因素、后遗症以及致病性和自身免疫性炎症性疾病康复的文章。在电子数据库(PubMed、EBSCO、ProQuest、Scopus和谷歌学术)中使用与脑部感染相关的关键词进行检索。采用Prisma-ScR指南筛选文章,并使用阿克西和奥马利的分析框架将识别出的因素归类为八个社会心理因素。
在总共检索到的6012篇文献中,有11篇文章符合标准。与脑部感染、残疾和死亡相关的全球负担、有发生脑部感染风险的弱势群体、现有文献中的空白、护理途径、心理健康、与感染及其后遗症相关的认知困难是确定的主要社会心理因素。
该综述旨在了解在低收入和中等收入国家背景下导致脑部感染延误和损害的众多社会心理因素。除生物医学因素外,还存在一些可能影响脑部感染治疗结果的社会心理因素。然而,只有少数因素得到了探讨,这表明需要更多研究为宏观层面的护理和可持续干预提供信息,以改善治疗结果并减轻脑部感染的负担。