利用行政卫生数据库解决农业人口的健康挑战:范围审查和文献计量分析(1975-2024)。

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Pascal Petit, Nicolas Vuillerme
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管农业卫生已变得越来越重要,但迄今为止,许多现有研究依赖于传统的流行病学方法,这些方法往往面临样本量、地理范围、时间覆盖范围和所检查的健康事件范围等方面的限制。为了应对这些挑战,一种补充方法涉及利用和重用超出其原始目的的数据。行政卫生数据库(AHDs)越来越多地用于基于人口的研究和数字公共卫生,特别是针对农民等面临明显环境风险的人群。目的:我们旨在通过总结基于ahd的研究现状,并确定关键的兴趣领域、研究差距和未满足的需求,探索ahd在解决农业人口健康问题中的再利用。方法:我们使用PubMed和Web of Science进行了范围综述和文献计量学分析。在先前对ahd公共卫生研究综述的基础上,我们使用72个与农业人口和ahd相关的术语进行了全面的文献检索。为了确定研究热点、方向和差距,我们使用了关键词频率、共现和主题映射。我们还通过绘制环境因素和健康结果之间的关键词共现图,探索了农业暴露的文献计量学概况。结果:1975年至2024年4月,118种期刊的296篇论文被确定,主要来自高收入国家。这些出版物中有近三分之一与已建立的队列相关,例如《农业与癌症和农业健康研究》。最常用的AHDs包括疾病登记(158/296,53.4%)、电子健康记录(124/296,41.9%)、保险索赔(106/296,35.8%)、人口登记(95/296,32.1%)和出院数据库(41/296,13.9%)。296项研究中有50项(16.9%)涉及1,100万参与者。虽然使用了广泛的暴露代理,但大多数研究(254/296,85.8%)依赖于广泛的代理,未能捕捉农业任务的具体情况。对农业暴露的研究仍未充分探索,主要集中在特定的外部暴露,特别是农药暴露。已经检查了范围有限的健康事件,主要是癌症、死亡率和伤害。结论:越来越多地使用ahd具有在农业人口中推进公共卫生研究的重大潜力。然而,实质性的研究差距仍然存在,特别是在低收入地区和代表性不足的农业亚群体中,如妇女、儿童和临时工。新出现的问题,包括接触全氟烷基和多氟烷基物质、生物制剂、微生物组、微塑料和气候变化,值得进一步研究。在了解各种健康状况方面也存在重大差距,包括心血管、生殖、眼部、睡眠相关、年龄相关和自身免疫性疾病。解决这些被忽视的领域对于理解农业社区面临的健康风险和指导公共卫生政策至关重要。在此背景下,促进基于ahd的研究,结合其他数字数据源(例如,移动卫生、社会卫生数据和可穿戴设备)和人工智能方法,是未来探索的一个有希望的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Leveraging Administrative Health Databases to Address Health Challenges in Farming Populations: Scoping Review and Bibliometric Analysis (1975-2024).

Background: Although agricultural health has gained importance, to date, much of the existing research relies on traditional epidemiological approaches that often face limitations related to sample size, geographic scope, temporal coverage, and the range of health events examined. To address these challenges, a complementary approach involves leveraging and reusing data beyond its original purpose. Administrative health databases (AHDs) are increasingly reused in population-based research and digital public health, especially for populations such as farmers, who face distinct environmental risks.

Objective: We aimed to explore the reuse of AHDs in addressing health issues within farming populations by summarizing the current landscape of AHD-based research and identifying key areas of interest, research gaps, and unmet needs.

Methods: We conducted a scoping review and bibliometric analysis using PubMed and Web of Science. Building upon previous reviews of AHD-based public health research, we conducted a comprehensive literature search using 72 terms related to the farming population and AHDs. To identify research hot spots, directions, and gaps, we used keyword frequency, co-occurrence, and thematic mapping. We also explored the bibliometric profile of the farming exposome by mapping keyword co-occurrences between environmental factors and health outcomes.

Results: Between 1975 and April 2024, 296 publications across 118 journals, predominantly from high-income countries, were identified. Nearly one-third of these publications were associated with well-established cohorts, such as Agriculture and Cancer and Agricultural Health Study. The most frequently used AHDs included disease registers (158/296, 53.4%), electronic health records (124/296, 41.9%), insurance claims (106/296, 35.8%), population registers (95/296, 32.1%), and hospital discharge databases (41/296, 13.9%). Fifty (16.9%) of 296 studies involved >1 million participants. Although a broad range of exposure proxies were used, most studies (254/296, 85.8%) relied on broad proxies, which failed to capture the specifics of farming tasks. Research on the farming exposome remains underexplored, with a predominant focus on the specific external exposome, particularly pesticide exposure. A limited range of health events have been examined, primarily cancer, mortality, and injuries.

Conclusions: The increasing use of AHDs holds major potential to advance public health research within farming populations. However, substantial research gaps persist, particularly in low-income regions and among underrepresented farming subgroups, such as women, children, and contingent workers. Emerging issues, including exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, biological agents, microbiome, microplastics, and climate change, warrant further research. Major gaps also persist in understanding various health conditions, including cardiovascular, reproductive, ocular, sleep-related, age-related, and autoimmune diseases. Addressing these overlooked areas is essential for comprehending the health risks faced by farming communities and guiding public health policies. Within this context, promoting AHD-based research, in conjunction with other digital data sources (eg, mobile health, social health data, and wearables) and artificial intelligence approaches, represents a promising avenue for future exploration.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.70
自引率
2.40%
发文量
136
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Public Health & Surveillance (JPHS) is a renowned scholarly journal indexed on PubMed. It follows a rigorous peer-review process and covers a wide range of disciplines. The journal distinguishes itself by its unique focus on the intersection of technology and innovation in the field of public health. JPHS delves into diverse topics such as public health informatics, surveillance systems, rapid reports, participatory epidemiology, infodemiology, infoveillance, digital disease detection, digital epidemiology, electronic public health interventions, mass media and social media campaigns, health communication, and emerging population health analysis systems and tools.
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