Carr Alistair L, Broadbent Philip, Ho Frederick K, Jani Bhautesh, Olsen Jonathan R, Wells Valerie, Mair Frances
General Practice and Primary Care, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
J Multimorb Comorb. 2025 May 5;15:26335565251333278. doi: 10.1177/26335565251333278. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
Preventing or delaying multimorbidity (people living with two or more chronic conditions) is a public health priority. It is currently uncertain if multimorbidity is associated with features of the built environment, a term describing human-made or modified features of the surroundings in which humans live.
To undertake a systematic review of the literature to determine if built environment features and interventions are associated with multimorbidity and to review the analytical methods used and their implications for causal inference.
Four databases will be searched (Medline, Embase, Science Citation Index Expanded, and Social Sciences Citation Index) using a prespecified search strategy that incorporates terms for both multimorbidity and the built environment, which includes aspects of neighbourhood design, transport interventions, natural environment, food environments, and housing. Inclusion criteria will include: 1) involves community-based adult populations not selected based on an index condition; and 2) a built environment exposure or intervention was assessed; and 3) outcomes include multimorbidity prevalence, incidence, or trajectory. Reference lists of included studies and previous reviews will also be searched. Two reviewers will independently screen, data extract, and quality appraise (using the ROBINS-E or RoB 2 tool). Results will be synthesised by meta-analysis or, if heterogeneity is too great, according to Synthesis without meta-analysis (SWiM) guidelines. Results will be grouped by type of exposure or intervention and by study quality.
This systematic review will improve understanding of built environment associations with multimorbidity. It could identify aetiological pathways that support the development of multimorbidity-preventative strategies.
预防或延缓多种疾病并存(患有两种或更多慢性疾病的人群)是公共卫生的重点。目前尚不确定多种疾病并存是否与建成环境的特征相关,建成环境是一个描述人类生活环境中人为或经过改造的特征的术语。
对文献进行系统综述,以确定建成环境特征和干预措施是否与多种疾病并存相关,并综述所使用的分析方法及其对因果推断的影响。
将使用预先指定的搜索策略检索四个数据库(医学索引数据库、荷兰医学文摘数据库、科学引文索引扩展版和社会科学引文索引),该策略纳入了多种疾病并存和建成环境的相关术语,建成环境包括邻里设计、交通干预、自然环境、食物环境和住房等方面。纳入标准将包括:1)涉及未基于索引疾病选择的社区成年人群;2)评估了建成环境暴露或干预措施;3)结果包括多种疾病并存的患病率、发病率或病程。还将搜索纳入研究和先前综述的参考文献列表。两名评审员将独立进行筛选、数据提取和质量评估(使用ROBINS-E或RoB 2工具)。结果将通过荟萃分析进行综合,或者如果异质性过大,则根据非荟萃分析的综合(SWiM)指南进行综合。结果将按暴露或干预类型以及研究质量进行分组。
本系统综述将增进对建成环境与多种疾病并存之间关联的理解。它可以识别支持制定多种疾病并存预防策略的病因途径。