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儿科骨科随机对照试验中健康社会决定因素报告的缺失

The Lack of Reporting Social Determinants of Health in Pediatric Orthopaedic Randomized Controlled Trials.

作者信息

Megafu Michael, Guerrero Omar, Yendluri Avanish, Uwefoh Michelle, Li Xinning, Kocher Mininder S, Ganley Theodore J, Parisien Robert L

机构信息

Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT.

A.T. Still University School of Osteopathic Medicine, Mesa, AZ.

出版信息

J Pediatr Orthop. 2025 Jan 1;45(1):22-27. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000002801. Epub 2024 Aug 22.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Social determinants of health (SDOHs) affect health outcomes outside the hospital, and understanding them can enhance postoperative outcomes in orthopaedic surgery patients. This study aimed to describe the prevalence of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in pediatric orthopaedic journals reporting on the SDOHs of their patient cohorts. We hypothesize that many SDOHs will be underreported in RCTs investigating pediatric orthopaedic surgery.

METHODS

Utilizing the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines, the authors queried the PubMed database to examine SDOHs from 2 pediatric orthopaedic journals: Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics and Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics: Part B. The inclusion criteria incorporated RCTs published between 2005 and April 2024. The exclusion criteria included any articles that were not RCTs published in this period.

RESULTS

One hundred thirteen articles met the search criteria, with 31 excluded because they did not fall from 2005 to 2024. Eighty-two were published from 2005 to 2024, but 6 RCTs were excluded, as 3 were non-RCTs, and 3 examined cadavers. Seventy-six RCTs were included for analysis, with 65 articles from the Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics and 11 articles from the Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics: Part B . Articles originated from 17 countries, with the United States producing 61.8% (47) of the included studies. Of all 76 included studies, 96.1% (73) reported age, 88.2% (67) reported sex/gender, 30.3% (23) reported BMI, 21.1% (16) reported race/ethnicity, 5.3% (4) reported educational level, 2.6% (2) reported stress, and 2.6% (2) reported insurance. Smoking status, socioeconomic status, income levels, and employment status were each reported by only 1 study.

CONCLUSIONS

The RCTs examining pediatric orthopaedic surgery tend to scarcely report SDOHs. Future RCTs should expand beyond demographic characteristics such as age, race/ethnicity, sex/gender, and BMI and incorporate other relevant SDOHs. This will allow us to develop a more comprehensive understanding of health outcomes in the pediatric orthopaedic population.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

I; Therapeutic Studies.

摘要

背景

健康的社会决定因素(SDOHs)会影响医院外的健康结果,了解这些因素可以改善骨科手术患者的术后结果。本研究旨在描述儿科骨科期刊中报告其患者队列SDOHs的随机对照试验(RCTs)的患病率。我们假设在调查儿科骨科手术的RCTs中,许多SDOHs将未得到充分报告。

方法

作者利用系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)指南,查询了PubMed数据库,以检查来自2本儿科骨科期刊的SDOHs:《儿科骨科杂志》和《儿科骨科杂志:B部分》。纳入标准包括2005年至2024年4月发表的RCTs。排除标准包括在此期间未发表的任何非RCTs文章。

结果

113篇文章符合搜索标准,其中31篇被排除,因为它们不属于2005年至2024年期间。82篇文章发表于2005年至2024年,但6项RCTs被排除,其中3项为非RCTs,3项研究的是尸体。纳入76项RCTs进行分析,其中65篇来自《儿科骨科杂志》,11篇来自《儿科骨科杂志:B部分》。文章来自17个国家,美国的研究占纳入研究的61.8%(47项)。在所有76项纳入研究中,96.1%(73项)报告了年龄,88.2%(67项)报告了性别,30.3%(23项)报告了BMI,21.1%(16项)报告了种族/民族,5.3%(4项)报告了教育水平,2.6%(2项)报告了压力,2.6%(2项)报告了保险。吸烟状况、社会经济状况、收入水平和就业状况每项仅在1项研究中被报告。

结论

研究儿科骨科手术的RCTs往往很少报告SDOHs。未来的RCTs应超越年龄、种族/民族、性别和BMI等人口统计学特征,纳入其他相关的SDOHs。这将使我们能够更全面地了解儿科骨科人群的健康结果。

证据水平

I;治疗性研究。

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