Dallo Florence J, Rimawi Asmaa, Barqawi Rami, Cruz Viviana, Gloria Gloria, Levin Leonard, Sadek Jessica, Salib Angelina, Simakas Isabella, Kindratt Tiffany
Oakland University, 433 Meadow Brook Road Rochester, Rochester, MI 48309-4452, MI, USA.
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Jun 9. doi: 10.1007/s40615-025-02503-9.
Prior to March 2024, Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) individuals in the United States (US) were overlooked in the health literature. This scoping review aims to clarify current knowledge across domains of physical and mental health conditions, risk factors, and preventive/screening behaviors among MENA populations. It also provides a road map for advancing MENA health research and enabling valid and reliable comparisons to the health of White and other minority populations.
The authors adhered to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines to compile the existing health research. They used PubMed®, EMBASE®, and CINAHL® with an end search date of July 5, 2023. The final search yielded 1826 records, of which 510 articles met the inclusion criteria. Descriptive statistics (frequency and percentages) were calculated.
Approximately 79% of the studies collected primary data and 75% were cross-sectional. Thirty-eight percent of the studies included Somalis, 29% Iraqis, and 18% Syrians. Thirty-one percent of the studies were conducted in Michigan, 17% in Minnesota, and 11% in California. The conditions that received the most attention in each domain were stress and trauma (approximately 11% each), infectious diseases (9.2%), cancer screening (6.1%), and diet (4.5%).
This review lays the groundwork for more accurate representation, improved surveillance, and the development of targeted interventions that promote health equity for MENA populations. The findings underscore the need for all organizations that collect race and ethnicity data to integrate MENA-specific identifiers into their practice.
在2024年3月之前,美国的中东和北非(MENA)人群在健康文献中被忽视。本范围综述旨在阐明MENA人群在身心健康状况、风险因素以及预防/筛查行为等领域的现有知识。它还为推进MENA健康研究以及与白人和其他少数族裔人群的健康进行有效可靠的比较提供了路线图。
作者遵循系统评价和Meta分析扩展的范围综述首选报告项目(PRISMA-ScR)指南来汇编现有的健康研究。他们使用了PubMed®、EMBASE®和CINAHL®,最终检索日期为2023年7月5日。最终检索得到1826条记录,其中510篇文章符合纳入标准。计算了描述性统计数据(频率和百分比)。
大约79%的研究收集了原始数据,75%为横断面研究。38%的研究纳入了索马里人;29%纳入了伊拉克人;18%纳入了叙利亚人。31%的研究在密歇根州进行;17%在明尼苏达州进行;11%在加利福尼亚州进行。每个领域中最受关注的状况是压力和创伤(各约11%)、传染病(9.2%)、癌症筛查(6.1%)和饮食(4.5%)。
本综述为更准确地呈现、改善监测以及制定促进MENA人群健康公平的针对性干预措施奠定了基础。研究结果强调了所有收集种族和族裔数据的组织都需要将特定于MENA的标识符纳入其实践中的必要性。