Department of Applied Human Nutrition, Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
WK Kellogg Health Sciences Library, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
JBI Evid Synth. 2023 Oct 1;21(10):2022-2081. doi: 10.11124/JBIES-22-00168.
The objective of this scoping review was to map the current literature and resources available on nutrition and food programming for people living with HIV in Canada. This review is phase 1 of a 4-phase project, called FoodNOW (Food to eNhance Our Wellness), a community-based nutritional needs assessment of people living with HIV in Nova Scotia, Canada.
People living with HIV may experience nutritional challenges, including nutritional deficiencies associated with the virus, food insecurity, and nutrition-drug interactions. Nutritional programming is often required for optimal care for people living with HIV. The literature, however, has not been sufficiently mapped to create a comprehensive picture of available programming. This review has informed the development of subsequent study phases, and will contribute towards shaping and planning food programs, as well as evaluating the need for subsequent systematic reviews.
This review considered literature focused on nutrition and food programming and resources in Canada for people living with HIV. People living with HIV of any age, sex, race, gender identity, or sexual orientation, as well as pregnant and lactating people, were included as the population of interest.
The databases searched were MEDLINE (Ovid), CINAHL (EBSCO), Academic Search Premier (EBSCO), Social Services Abstracts (ProQuest), and Scopus. Sources of gray literature searched included government and organization websites, and Google searches. The database search was conducted in July 2021, and the gray literature searches were conducted in August and October 2021. Searches were limited to evidence published or translated in English. Two independent reviewers conducted title and abstract screening, and potentially relevant results were retrieved in full. Full-text screening and data extraction was conducted by 2 independent reviewers using a data extraction tool designed specifically for the scoping review objectives and research inclusion criteria, and any conflicts were resolved through discussion. Results are presented in both tabular and diagrammatic formats, with a narrative summary.
A total of 581 results were screened (published and gray literature). A total of 64 results were included in the review. The 6 reasons for exclusion at full-text review were i) not nutrition and food programming (n= 83), ii) not Canadian (n= 37), iii) duplicates (n= 22), iv) not focused on people living with HIV (n= 6), v) conference abstract (n= 1), and vi) not in English (n= 1). A total of 76 resources were located, as some of the 64 included sources offered more than 1 resource. The 76 resources were organized into 6 categories: i) charitable food provision (n = 21; 27.6%), ii) financial aid (n = 14; 18.4%), iii) nutrition care (n =12; 15.8%), iv) providing access to secondary sources (n= 10; 13.2%), v) food and nutrition expertise (n= 10; 13.2%), and vi) population health promotion (n= 9; 11.8%). Recommendations for future research and programming are discussed.
This scoping review demonstrates that current programming relies heavily on charitable food provision services for people living with HIV and that there is an unequal distribution of resources across Canada. Program expansion to target diverse populations with more equal distribution across Canada may improve overall health outcomes for people living with HIV. Future research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of available programming and the needs of end users (people living with HIV and their supports). FoodNOW will build on these findings to further explore and address the needs of people living with HIV.
Open Science Framework https://osf.io/97x3r.
本范围综述旨在绘制加拿大艾滋病毒感染者营养和食品规划现有文献和资源图。本综述是名为“FoodNOW”(食物增强我们的健康)的 4 个阶段项目的第 1 阶段,这是一项针对加拿大新斯科舍省艾滋病毒感染者的基于社区的营养需求评估。
艾滋病毒感染者可能会面临营养挑战,包括与病毒相关的营养缺乏、粮食不安全和营养-药物相互作用。营养规划通常是艾滋病毒感染者获得最佳护理的必要条件。然而,文献并没有被充分地绘制出来,无法全面了解现有的规划。本综述为随后的研究阶段的发展提供了信息,并将有助于规划食品项目,以及评估后续系统评价的需求。
本综述考虑了加拿大针对艾滋病毒感染者的营养和食品规划以及资源的文献。包括任何年龄、性别、种族、性别认同或性取向的艾滋病毒感染者,以及孕妇和哺乳期妇女,都作为感兴趣的人群。
搜索的数据库包括 MEDLINE(Ovid)、CINAHL(EBSCO)、Academic Search Premier(EBSCO)、Social Services Abstracts(ProQuest)和 Scopus。搜索的灰色文献来源包括政府和组织网站以及谷歌搜索。数据库搜索于 2021 年 7 月进行,灰色文献搜索于 2021 年 8 月和 10 月进行。搜索仅限于已发表或翻译成英文的证据。两名独立评审员进行标题和摘要筛选,并检索潜在相关的全文。两名独立评审员使用专门为范围综述目标和研究纳入标准设计的数据提取工具进行全文筛选和数据提取,如果存在任何冲突,则通过讨论解决。结果以表格和图表格式呈现,并附有叙述性总结。
共筛选了 581 项结果(已发表和灰色文献)。共有 64 项研究结果被纳入综述。在全文审查中被排除的 6 个原因是:i)不是营养和食品规划(n=83),ii)不是加拿大(n=37),iii)重复(n=22),iv)不是针对艾滋病毒感染者(n=6),v)会议摘要(n=1),vi)不是英文(n=1)。共找到了 76 个资源,因为 64 个纳入的来源中的一些提供了不止一个资源。这 76 个资源被分为 6 类:i)慈善食品供应(n=21;27.6%),ii)财政援助(n=14;18.4%),iii)营养护理(n=12;15.8%),iv)提供获取次要资源的途径(n=10;13.2%),v)食品和营养专业知识(n=10;13.2%),以及 vi)人口健康促进(n=9;11.8%)。讨论了未来研究和规划的建议。
本范围综述表明,当前的规划严重依赖于慈善食品供应服务来为艾滋病毒感染者提供服务,而且加拿大的资源分布不均。为了提高艾滋病毒感染者的整体健康结果,可能需要扩大规划范围,以针对更多样化的人群,并在加拿大更平等地分配资源。需要进行未来的研究来评估现有规划的有效性和最终用户(艾滋病毒感染者及其支持人员)的需求。FoodNOW 将基于这些发现进一步探索和解决艾滋病毒感染者的需求。
Open Science Framework https://osf.io/97x3r。