The Incidence of Stroke in Indigenous Populations of Countries With a Very High Human Development Index: A Systematic Review Protocol
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23890Dato
2021-04-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Balabanski, Anna H.; Dos Santos, Angela; Woods, John A.; Thrift, Amanda G.; Kleinig, Timothy J.; Suchy-Dicey, Astrid; Siri, Susanna Ragnhild; Boden-Albala, Bernadette; Krishnamurthi, Rita V.; Feigin, Valery L.; Buchwald, Dedra; Ranta, Anna; Mienna, Christina S.; Zavaleta, Carol; Churilov, Leonid; Burchill, Luke; Zion, Deborah; Longstreth, W.T.; Tirschwell, David L.; Anand, Sonia; Parsons, Mark W.; Brown, Alex; Warne, Donald K.; Harwood, Matire; Katzenellenbogen, Judith M.Sammendrag
Methods: Using PubMed, OVID-EMBASE, and Global Health databases, we will examine population-based incidence studies of stroke in Indigenous adult populations of developed countries published 1990-current, without language restriction. Non-peer-reviewed sources, studies including <10 Indigenous People, or with insufficient data to determine incidence, will be excluded. Two reviewers will independently validate the search strategies, screen titles and abstracts, and record reasons for rejection. Relevant articles will undergo full-text screening, with standard data extracted for all studies included. Quality assessment will include Sudlow and Warlow's criteria for population-based stroke incidence studies, the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale for risk of bias, and the CONSIDER checklist for Indigenous research.
Results: Primary outcomes include crude, age-specific and/or age-standardized incidence of stroke. Secondary outcomes include overall stroke rates, incidence rate ratio and case-fatality. Results will be synthesized in figures and tables, describing data sources, populations, methodology, and findings. Within-population meta-analysis will be performed if, and where, methodologically sound and comparable studies allow this.
Conclusion: We will undertake the first systematic review assessing disparities in stroke incidence in Indigenous populations of developed countries. Data outputs will be disseminated to relevant Indigenous stakeholders to inform public health and policy research.