[COVID-19大流行的性别不平等:以性和性别少数群体为重点的系统综述]。

Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-05 DOI:10.1055/a-2228-6244
Nora M Laskowski, Gerrit Brandt, Georgios Paslakis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:从 COVID-19 大流行一开始,性别就被证明在人们如何受其影响方面扮演着重要角色,而与性少数群体和性别少数群体(SGM)相关的方面却未得到充分研究。本综述的目的是对在大流行中明确涉及性别影响的系统综述和荟萃分析进行综合,重点关注 SGM:我们根据 PubMed 的文献检索结果进行了叙述性综合。我们收录了截至 2019 年的系统综述和荟萃分析,其中包含可识别的性别比较或 SGM 参考文献以及特定的临床结果:搜索结果有 2 658 次点击;29 篇系统综述被纳入内容综合。其中,我们确定了 23 篇有性别比较的系统综述和 8 篇与 SGM 相关的系统综述。与女性相比,男性在 COVID-19 的发病率、严重程度和死亡率方面均高于女性,但 COVID-19 大流行对女性造成的心理影响却高于男性。有证据表明,女性感染 COVID-19 的风险更高。与普通人群相比,SGM 在 COVID-19 大流行期间经历了更多的心理健康问题:讨论:看来生物和社会风险导致了对 COVID-19 感染和疾病表现的不同易感性,也是造成男女死亡率差异的原因。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,尚缺乏对 SGM 患病率、疾病负担和死亡率的深入了解。这表明在与 COVID-19 相关的研究中,SGM 的代表性不足。尽管有大量关于 COVID-19 的出版物,但对性别影响的研究往往不够明确和充分:未来的研究应考察性别差异、SGM 在精神疾病中的需求和担忧,以及更多未被充分研究的实体,如长 COVID-19,以获得深入的见解,并帮助为所有人提供预防措施和适当的治疗,以及为未来潜在的流行病提供预防措施和适当的治疗。
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[Gender Inequalities of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Synthesis of Systematic Reviews with a Focus on Sexual and Gender Minorities].

Objective: From the very beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, gender was shown to play a significant role in how people were affected by it, while aspects related to sexual and gender minorities (SGM) have been rather understudied. The aim of this review was to synthesize systematic reviews and meta-analyses that explicitly addressed the impact of gender within the context of the pandemic, with a focus on SGM.

Methods: We based the narrative synthesis of results on a literature search of PubMed. We included systematic reviews and meta-analyses as of 2019 with an identifiable gender comparison or SGM reference and a specified clinical outcome.

Results: The search yielded 2 658 hits; 29 systematic reviews were included for content synthesis. Of these, we identified 23 systematic reviews with gender comparisons and 8 related to SGM. Men showed higher prevalence, severity, and mortality of COVID-19 compared with women, but the psychological consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic affected women more compared with men. Evidence suggests that women are at higher risk for Long-COVID-19. SGM experienced increased mental health problems during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to the general population.

Discussion: It appears that biological and social risks led to differential susceptibility to infection and manifestation of COVID-19 disease and also accounted for differences in mortality between men and women. Insights on prevalence, disease burden, and mortality among SGM during the COVID-19 pandemic are lacking. This suggests an underrepresentation of SGM in COVID-19-related research. Despite the abundance of COVID-19 publications, gender effects have not often been explicitly and adequately studied.

Conclusion: Future studies should examine gender differences and needs and concerns of SGM in mental disorders and further understudied entities like Long-COVID-19, to gain insights and help to provide preventive measures and adequate treatments for all, for potential future pandemics as well.

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