University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee.
University of Louisville and Norton Children's Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky.
Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2024 Nov;133(5):516-521. doi: 10.1016/j.anai.2024.08.028. Epub 2024 Aug 24.
The COVID-19 pandemic has arguably had its greatest impact in rural and other historically hard-to-reach populations. Families in rural and underserved communities experienced COVID-19 infections at a higher rate than did their peers in other groups and experienced disproportionate morbidity and mortality. Without careful design and implementation of resources, children in these areas are also at risk of being disproportionately affected by long-term sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infections, such as "long COVID" syndromes. Increased frequency and severity of COVID-19 infections, decreased access to health care and supporting services, environmental and social structure factors that exacerbate post-acute sequelae of COVID-19, and increased baseline frequency of health disorders that may complicate post-COVID issues, such as higher rates of obesity, asthma, diabetes, and mental health disorders, all place children and adolescents in under-resourced areas at significant risk. Unfortunately, children and adolescents in these areas have been historically under-represented in clinical research. Not only are fewer studies published with participants in rural and underserved communities, but these studies more often exhibit lower quality, with fewer randomized controlled trials and multicenter studies. This gap not only deprives people in rural and underserved areas of the country of access to cutting-edge therapy, but it also risks "evidence-based" solutions that are not generalizable because they cannot be implemented in the areas disproportionately affected by many health conditions such as long COVID. These factors significantly impede our ability to provide appropriate medical care for underserved communities. This review will discuss the impact of COVID-19 in rural and underserved communities and the factors that must be considered in designing evidence-based long-COVID solutions for children and adolescents in these areas.
新冠疫情对农村和其他历来难以覆盖的人群的影响无疑是最大的。农村和服务不足社区的家庭感染新冠的比例高于其他群体,发病率和死亡率不成比例。如果没有精心设计和实施资源,这些地区的儿童也有可能因 SARS-CoV-2 感染的长期后遗症(如“长新冠”综合征)而受到不成比例的影响。新冠感染的频率和严重程度增加,获得医疗保健和支持服务的机会减少,加剧新冠后后遗症的环境和社会结构因素,以及可能使新冠后问题复杂化的基线健康障碍的频率增加,如肥胖、哮喘、糖尿病和精神健康障碍的更高发病率,所有这些都使资源匮乏地区的儿童和青少年面临重大风险。不幸的是,这些地区的儿童和青少年在临床研究中历来代表性不足。不仅农村和服务不足社区参与者参与的研究发表较少,而且这些研究往往质量较低,随机对照试验和多中心研究较少。这一差距不仅使农村和服务不足地区的人们无法获得最先进的治疗方法,而且还存在“基于证据”的解决方案的风险,因为这些解决方案不可推广,因为它们无法在受许多健康状况(如长新冠)影响不成比例的地区实施。这些因素严重阻碍了我们为服务不足社区提供适当医疗护理的能力。这篇综述将讨论新冠疫情对农村和服务不足社区的影响,以及在为这些地区的儿童和青少年设计基于证据的长新冠解决方案时必须考虑的因素。