气候驱动因素对孕产妇健康影响的范围审查:当前证据和临床影响

Claire Masters MHP , Chuhan Wu MS , Dara Gleeson MPH , Michaela Serafica RN, MSN , Jordan L. Thomas PhD , Jeannette R. Ickovics PhD
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的系统回顾有关气候因素与孕妇健康结局之间关系的文献。这篇综述通过为临床医生提供综合证据来填补空白。数据来源对2010年1月至2023年12月在PubMed和clinicaltrials.gov上发表的文章进行系统的范围审查。研究资格标准发表在英文同行评议期刊上的实证研究,评估某些气候驱动因素与不良孕产妇和分娩结果之间的关系。该综述包括对高温、风暴、海平面上升、洪水、干旱、野火和其他与气候有关的因素的研究。健康结果包括早产、低出生体重、小于胎龄、妊娠期糖尿病、先兆子痫/子痫、流产/死产和孕产妇死亡率。研究评价和综合方法范围评价方案已在国际系统评价和荟萃分析方案注册平台(INPLASY202410004, 2024年1月3日)注册,并按照系统评价和荟萃分析首选报告项目(PRISMA)进行。数据由2位作者提取;独立评估偏倚的质量和风险。结果共筛选文献966篇;16.35% (k=158)符合纳入标准。大多数研究(146/158;92.4%)记录了气候驱动因素与不良围产期健康结局(包括早产、低出生体重、死胎以及先兆子痫、妊娠糖尿病、流产和孕产妇死亡风险)之间具有统计学意义和临床意义的关联。其中最持久的发现是:妊娠早期和晚期的极端高温暴露与早产和死产的风险增加有关。部分受大型(通常是基于人群的)研究和来自监测数据或医疗记录综述的客观结果的推动,本范围综述中的研究被评为高质量(在纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表上得分为7-9)。偏倚风险普遍较低。结论气候驱动因素始终与孕妇的不良健康结果相关。应扩大对临床医生的继续教育和医患沟通,以应对气候变化和极端天气暴露的风险,特别是妊娠后期的极端高温风险。本综述的结果应该为解决妊娠期气候对健康的不利影响的多层次干预以及产科的实践建议、协议、检查清单和临床指南提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Scoping review of climate drivers on maternal health: current evidence and clinical implications

Objective

To systematically review the literature on associations between climate drivers and health outcomes among pregnant people. This review fills a gap by synthesizing evidence for a clinician audience.

Data Sources

Systematic scoping review of articles published in PubMed and clinicaltrials.gov from January 2010 through December 2023.

Study Eligibility Criteria

Empirical studies published in English-language peer-reviewed journals, assessing associations between select climate drivers and adverse maternal and birth outcomes. The review included studies examining heat, storms, sea level rise, flooding, drought, wildfires, and other climate-related factors. Health outcomes included preterm birth, low birthweight, small for gestational age, gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia/eclampsia, miscarriage/stillbirth and maternal mortality.

Study Appraisal and Synthesis Methods

The scoping review protocol was registered with the International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols (INPLASY202410004, January 3, 2024) and conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA). Data were extracted by 2 authors; quality and risk of bias was assessed independently.

Results

Total of 966 references were screened; 16.35% (k=158) met inclusion criteria. The majority of studies (146/158; 92.4%) documented statistically significant and clinically meaningful associations between climate drivers and adverse perinatal health outcomes, including risk of preterm birth, low birthweight, and stillbirth as well as preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, miscarriage, and maternal death. Among the most durable findings: extreme heat exposure in early and late pregnancy were associated with increased risk of preterm birth and stillbirth. Driven in part by large (often population-based) studies and objective outcomes from surveillance data or medical record reviews, studies in this scoping review were evaluated as high quality (scoring 7-9 on the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale). Risk of bias was generally low.

Conclusions

Climate drivers are consistently associated with adverse health outcomes for pregnant people. Continuing education for clinicians, and clinician-patient communications should be expanded to address risks of climate change and extreme weather exposure, especially risks of extreme heat in late-pregnancy. Results from this review should inform multilevel interventions to address adverse health effects of climate during pregnancy as well as practice advisories, protocols, checklists, and clinical guidelines in obstetrics.
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来源期刊
AJOG global reports
AJOG global reports Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health, Urology
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