地震到洪水:低收入和中等收入国家与健康有关的灾害研究的范围审查。

Catherine M Tansey, John Pringle, Anushree Davé, Renaud Boulanger, Matthew Hunt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导读:与健康相关的灾害研究相对较少;但是越来越多的研究领域。在资助者、研究人员、人道主义援助组织和政府努力确定受灾害影响人口的差距、差距、趋势和需求时,更好地了解中低收入国家开展的与健康有关的灾害研究的范围和规模,将对他们有所帮助。方法:我们使用Arksey & O'Malley概述的流程进行了范围审查,以评估2003-2012年在中低收入国家进行的与健康相关的实证灾害研究的同行评议出版物的特征。结果:共检索到相关文献582篇。迄今为止,地震是该综述时间框架内最常被研究的事件(62%的文章)。关于中国和南亚/东南亚灾害的文章比其他所有地区都多。超过一半的文章(51%)是由研究团队发表的,其中所有作者的主要附属机构都位于进行研究的同一国家。大多数文章被归类为精神健康、神经病学和应激生理学(35%)或创伤学、伤口和外科(19%)。在超过一半的文章(54%)中,数据收集是在灾难发生后的3个月内开始的,13%的研究是在灾难发生后的3到6个月内开始的。我们综述中的文章发表在282种不同的期刊上。讨论:考虑到地震在中低收入国家是毁灭性的突发事件,研究地震后果的大量出版物可能并不令人惊讶。研究人员研究灾难发生后需要立即关注的主题,如创伤手术,以及后来出现的健康问题,如创伤后应激障碍。在审查的时间框架内,一个被忽视的研究领域是灾害对非传染性疾病和慢性病(不包括精神健康)的影响,以及灾后对这些疾病的管理。加强灾害研究能力对于促进灾后强有力的研究至关重要,这是中低收入国家特别需要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Earthquakes to Floods: A Scoping Review of Health-related Disaster Research in Low- and Middle-income Countries.

Earthquakes to Floods: A Scoping Review of Health-related Disaster Research in Low- and Middle-income Countries.

Earthquakes to Floods: A Scoping Review of Health-related Disaster Research in Low- and Middle-income Countries.

Earthquakes to Floods: A Scoping Review of Health-related Disaster Research in Low- and Middle-income Countries.

Introduction: Health-related disaster research is a relatively small; but growing field of inquiry.  A better understanding of the scope and scale of health-related disaster research that has occurred in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) would be useful to funders, researchers, humanitarian aid organizations, and governments as they strive to identify gaps, disparities, trends, and needs of populations affected by disasters.

Methodology: We performed a scoping review using the process outlined by Arksey & O'Malley to assess the characteristics of peer-reviewed publications of empirical health-related disaster research conducted in LMICs and published in the years 2003-2012.

Results: Five hundred and eighty-two relevant publications were identified.  Earthquakes were by far the most commonly researched events (62% of articles) in the review's timeframe.  More articles were published about disasters in China & South Asia/South East Asia than all other regions.  Just over half of the articles (51%) were published by research teams in which all the authors' primary listed affiliations were with an institution located in the same country where the research was conducted.  Most of the articles were classified as either mental health, neurology and stress physiology (35%) or as traumatology, wounds and surgery (19%).  In just over half of the articles (54%), data collection was initiated within 3 months of the disaster, and in 13% research was initiated between 3 and 6 months following the disaster.  The articles in our review were published in 282 different journals.

Discussion: The high number of publications studying consequences of an earthquake may not be surprising, given that earthquakes are devastating sudden onset events in LMICs.  Researchers study topics that require immediate attention following a disaster, such as trauma surgery, as well as health problems that manifest later, such as post-traumatic stress disorder.  One neglected area of study during the review's timeframe was the impact of disasters on non-communicable and chronic diseases (excluding mental health), and the management of these conditions in the aftermath of disasters. Strengthening disaster research capacity is critical for fostering robust research in the aftermath of disasters, a particular need in LMICs.

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