| Literature DB >> 30999694 |
Karla Romero Starke1, Marlen Kofahl2, Alice Freiberg3, Melanie Schubert4, Mascha Luisa Groß5, Stefanie Schmauder6, Janice Hegewald7, Daniel Kämpf8, Johanna Stranzinger9, Albert Nienhaus10,11, Andreas Seidler12.
Abstract
Objective: In this systematic review, we aimed to summarize the evidence on the association between being a daycare educator working with children and the possible increased risk of parvovirus B19 infection compared to the general population.Entities:
Keywords: daycare; daycare workers; fifth disease; kindergarten teachers; occupational disease; occupational risk; parvovirus B19
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30999694 PMCID: PMC6517978 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16081392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The Medline search strategy PubMed February 2018 (Last update 4 October 2018).
Figure 2The study process flow.
The characteristics of the included studies.
| First Author, Publication Year | Study Region | Study Design | Population | Exposure, Duration of Employment, Job Duties | Outcome | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample Population | No. of Exposed/ | Time of Recruitment | |||||
| De Villemeur et al. 2011 | France | Cross-sectional study | Women 20–50 yr, not pregnant, employed in either 1 of 83 child daycare centers (exposed) or in 1 of 2 business organizations (unexposed) | Exposed | 2005–2007 | Self-administered questionnaires | Blood samples |
| Riipinen et al. 2014 | Finland | Retrospective cohort study | Pregnant women from the Finnish Maternity Cohort, who were pregnant during September 1992–August 1993 | September 1992–August 1993 | Nursery school teachers identified from files of Trade Union of Education (95% unionization rate for teachers) and the Union of Professional Social Workers. | B19V IgG by an indirect enzyme immunoassay using streptavidin-bound biotinylated virus-like particles of virus protein 2 as an antigen. | |
| Van Rijckevorsel et al. 2012 | The Netherlands | Cross-sectional study | Childcare personnel working in 38 daycare centers on the Amsterdam municipal register (exposed), compared to women not working in daycare from Amsterdam Health Monitor (AMH) survey (unexposed) | Exposed | Daycare center employees: 2007 | Face interviews and through a cross-sectional survey in 2007 by the Public Health Service of Amsterdam | Blood samples |
| Gilbert et al. 2005 | Canada | Cross-sectional study | Educators working in daycare centers which were in current operation, enrolled children under 36 months and employed at least six educators. | Exposed | October–December 2001 | Questionnaires sent to directors and educators | ELISA parvovirus B19 IgG |
| † N.A. = not available | |||||||
The summary of the parvovirus B19 seroprevalence and risk estimates for daycare workers.
| Risk Estimates (Outcomes Ia and Ib) | Seroprevalence Estimates (Outcome II) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study ID | Effect Estimate | Effect Value | Adjusted for | Further Analysis | Age Category | Seroprevalence, % in Daycare Workers | Other Analysis |
| De Villemeur et al. 2011 | PR † | 1.05 | Age, occupational group, number of own children, attendance/duration of in-home childcare and/or informal child-care and/or child-care facility, and residence in a country of low/medium economic development | - | all | 79.4 (75.1–83.3) | - |
| ≤37 years | 67.7 (59.0–75.5) | ||||||
| >37 years | 85.4 (80.6–89.5) | ||||||
| Riipinenet al. 2014 | HR ‡ | Daycare worker | Age, employment, number of children, high infection risk period, capital region | Nulliparous women only: | all | 59.1 (56.9–61.3) | - |
| 19–34 years | 58.9 (56.6–61.2) | ||||||
| 35–48 years | 61.3 (53.8–68.5) | ||||||
| Van Rijckevorsel et al. 2012 | PR † | 1.2 | Age, country of birth, having children | - | all | 72.2 (66.7–78.2) | - |
| Gilbert | - | - | - | - | all | 69.8 (65.5–73.9) | Seroprevalence by experience in daycare: |
| ≤34 years | 64.6 (58.2–70.6) | ||||||
| >34 years | 75.5 (69.5–81.0) | ||||||
| † Prevalence Ratio | |||||||
Figure 3The risk of bias of the included studies.
Figure 4The effect size (ES) of relative risk by study’s risk of bias.