School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
University of Ottawa Heart Institute Cardiovascular Devices Research Laboratory, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2024 Oct 10;14(10):e080233. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080233.
Worldwide, more immigrants experience vitamin D (vitD) deficiency than non-immigrants. Recommendations in current clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) concerning vitD are inadequate to address vitD deficiency among immigrants, and there are concerns regarding the quality of guidance in these CPGs.
This study aimed to identify and evaluate the quality of published CPGs addressing vitD and immigrants' health using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation-II (AGREE II) tool and clarify the recommendations pertaining to vitD and immigrant populations in these CPGs.
We performed a systematic search to identify the most recent CPGs across various databases (Ovid MEDLINE ALL, Embase and Turning Research Into Practice), guideline repositories and grey literature. Two reviewers independently conducted study selection and data abstraction and evaluated the quality of the included guidelines using the AGREE II tool.
We identified 25 relevant CPGs; 21 focused on vitD and 4 covered immigrants' health. Around one-quarter of the included CPGs were high quality (≥60% in at least four of the six domains, including 'rigour of development'). The highest mean scores among the six AGREE II domains were for 'clarity of presentation' and 'scope and purpose'. About 4.8% (1/21) of the CPGs on vitD had immigrant-related recommendations. VitD recommendations were emphasised in one out of the four immigrant health CPGs (25%). CPGs covering immigrants' health and vitD were inadequately systematically appraised. Moreover, recommendations regarding vitD were insufficient to address the growing epidemic of vitD deficiency among immigrant populations.
The insufficient recommendations for vitD fail to address the rising vitD deficiency among immigrants, highlighting a critical gap in healthcare provisions. Urgent national and international efforts are needed to develop comprehensive CPGs, bridging research, policy and practice disparities. Future guidelines must prioritise routine vitD screening, supplementation protocols for vulnerable immigrant groups, and culturally appropriate interventions to improve health outcomes for immigrants globally.
CRD42021240562.
在全球范围内,移民经历维生素 D(vitD)缺乏的比例高于非移民。当前临床实践指南(CPGs)中关于 vitD 的建议不足以解决移民中的 vitD 缺乏问题,并且人们对这些 CPG 中的指导质量存在担忧。
本研究旨在使用评估指南研究与评价 II(AGREE II)工具确定和评估针对 vitD 和移民健康的已发表 CPG 的质量,并阐明这些 CPG 中关于 vitD 和移民人群的建议。
我们进行了系统搜索,以在各种数据库(Ovid MEDLINE ALL、Embase 和 Turning Research Into Practice)、指南存储库和灰色文献中确定最新的 CPG。两名审查员独立进行研究选择和数据提取,并使用 AGREE II 工具评估纳入指南的质量。
我们确定了 25 项相关 CPG;21 项专注于 vitD,4 项涵盖移民健康。纳入的 CPG 中有四分之一左右质量较高(至少四个领域中的 6 个中有≥60%,包括“制定的严谨性”)。AGREE II 六个领域中得分最高的是“表述的清晰度”和“范围和目的”。21 项 vitD 相关 CPG 中约有 4.8%(1/21)有与移民相关的建议。四项移民健康 CPG 中有一项(25%)强调了 vitD 建议。涵盖移民健康和 vitD 的 CPG 没有得到系统的充分评估。此外,vitD 建议不足以解决移民人群中日益严重的 vitD 缺乏问题。
vitD 建议不足,无法解决移民中不断增加的 vitD 缺乏问题,这突显了医疗保健服务提供方面的一个关键差距。需要国家和国际紧急努力制定全面的 CPG,弥合研究、政策和实践差距。未来的指南必须优先考虑常规 vitD 筛查、脆弱移民群体的补充方案以及文化上适当的干预措施,以改善全球移民的健康结果。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42021240562。