与南亚人冠心病相关的社会心理因素:一项系统综述

Debjani Gangopadhyay, R. Bhopal
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:南亚后裔在英国有较高的冠心病(CHD)风险。社会心理因素影响冠心病的风险,与种族无关。压力、抑郁和焦虑等因素被认为是心脏病的预测因素。本综述的目的是系统回顾欧洲和北美南亚人的社会心理因素与冠心病的定量研究,以回答以下问题:居住在欧洲和北美的南亚人的社会心理因素与冠心病之间的关系是什么?方法:根据综述与传播中心的建议和PRISMA指南进行系统的文献综述。使用相关术语检索电子数据库,并将数据提取成数据提取表。质量评估标准改编自国家健康和临床卓越研究所(NICE) 2009年指南。计划进行一次叙述性的回顾。结果:纳入了5项横断面研究及其相关的8篇论文。这些研究因样本的年龄、心理社会因素和报告而有所不同。在抑郁症方面,四项研究表明,南亚人患抑郁症的比例高于白人。两项研究报告称,与一般人群相比,南亚人的乐观情绪偏低。五分之四的研究表明,与一般人群相比,南亚男性的社会支持度较低。一项研究发现,与白人相比,南亚人在工作中控制力较低,社会支持度较高。一项研究显示,工作压力没有差异。结论:证据有限,但表明与一般人群相比,南亚人的社会心理风险因素更为普遍。新的,大规模的,特别是前瞻性的研究应该探讨这一点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Psychosocial factors in relation to coronary heart disease in South Asians: a systematic review
Background: People of South Asia descent in the UK have high coronary heart disease (CHD) risk. Psychosocial factors affect the risk of CHD, independent of ethnicity. Factors such as stress, depression and anxiety are postulated to be predictors of heart disease. The objectives of this review were to systematically review quantitative research on psychosocial factors and CHD in South Asians in Europe and North America to answer the question: What is the relation between psychosocial factors and CHD in South Asians residing in Europe and North America? Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted according to the recommendations of the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination and the PRISMA guidelines. Electronic databases were searched using relevant terms and data were extracted into data extraction forms. The quality assessment criteria were adapted from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidance 2009. A narrative review was planned. Results: Five cross-sectional studies and their associated eight papers were included. The studies varied with reference to the age of samples, psychosocial factors and in reporting. For depression, four studies showed increased levels in South Asian population compared to the White population. Two studies reported low optimism present in South Asians compared to the general population. Four out of five studies showed lower social support in South Asian men in comparison to the general population. One study found that South Asians had low control and high social support at work compared to the White population. One study showed no differences in work strain. Conclusions: The evidence was limited but indicated psychosocial risk factors were commoner in South Asians compared to the general population. New, large scale, especially prospective studies should explore this.
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