| Literature DB >> 31126261 |
Farah Naja1, Hibeh Shatila1, Maria El Koussa2, Lokman Meho3, Lilian Ghandour4, Shadi Saleh5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The scarcity of evidence-based research on non-communicable diseases (NCDs) among Syrian refugees has hampered efforts to address the high burden of these diseases in host countries. The objective of this study is to examine published research on NCDs among Syrian refugees in order to inform future research, practice, programs, and policy. .Entities:
Keywords: Conflict; Health; Non-communicable diseases; Syrian refugees
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31126261 PMCID: PMC6534897 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6977-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flowchart describing the selection of records/documents to be included in this study
Characterization of documents addressing NCDs’ research among Syrian refugees (2011–2017). (n = 34)
| n(%)b | |
|---|---|
| Document type | |
| Journal article | 24 (70.6) |
| Report | 7 (20.6) |
| Book chapter | 3 (8.8) |
| Authors’ affiliationsa | |
| Academic institutions only | 15 (44.1) |
| Academic and other institutionsb | 10 (29.4) |
| INGO/NGOs (only) | 3 (8.8) |
| Hospital (only) | 1 (2.9) |
| N/A (reports) | 5 (14.7) |
| Countries of institutions leading in research on SR and NCD (according to corresponding author) | |
| USA | 8 (23.5) |
| Jordan | 6 (17.6) |
| UK | 3 (8.8) |
| Turkey | 2 (5.9) |
| Slovenia | 2 (5.9) |
| Other (Belgium (1), Denmark(1), Greece(1), Iran(1), Israel(1), Slovakia(1), Spain(1), Switzerland(1)) | 8 (23.5) |
| N/A d | 5 (14.7) |
| Study locationd | |
| Jordan | 15 (38.5) |
| Lebanon | 9 (23.1) |
| Turkey | 3 (7.7) |
| Iraq | 2 (5.1) |
| Greece | 1 (2.6) |
| Belgium | 1 (2.6) |
| Slovenian-Croatian border | 1 (2.6) |
| Other d | 7 (17.9) |
| Study design | |
| Cross-sectional | 17 (50.0) |
| Review | 5 (14.7) |
| Interventions | 2 (5.9) |
| NA (reports and book chapters) | 10 (29.4) |
| Sample population studied c | |
| Syrian refugees (no other refugees) | 22 (64.7) |
| Other refugees (in addition to Syrians) | 12 (35.3) |
| Sample include IDPs | 3 (8.8) |
| Sample include host community | 7 (20.6) |
| Living conditions of the study populationc | |
| Decentralized accommodation | 12 (30.8) |
| Formal tented settlement/initial reception centers/Collective accommodation center | 4 (10.3) |
| Informal tented settlements | 3 (7.7) |
| Not specified | 19 (48.7) |
| On the Balkan route | 1 (2.6) |
| Sample recruitmentc | |
| Healthcare facility (Hospital, PHC) | 11 (31.4) |
| Community (population-based) | 5 (14.3) |
| NGO Facility | 3 (8.6) |
| Refugee camps | 1 (2.9) |
| Schools | 0 (0.0) |
| N/A (did not include recruitment of study participants) | 15 (42.9) |
| Methods for data collectionc | |
| Chart/record extraction | 10 (23.3) |
| Face-to-face household/site survey | 13 (20.2) |
| Telephone interview | 5 (11.6) |
| Online survey | 0 (0.0) |
| N/A | 15 (34.9) |
| Age of the study populationc | |
| Pregnant and breastfeeding | 11 (8.2) |
| Infant and child (< 2 years) | 15 (11.2) |
| Children (2–9 years) | 17 (12.7) |
| Children and Adolescents (> 10 and > 18) | 18 (13.4) |
| Young adults (18–25) | 20 (14.9) |
| Adults (18–50) | 26 (19.4) |
| Older Adults (>50) | 27 (20.2) |
| Sex of study population | |
| Both males and females | 34 (100) |
| Males or females only | 0 (0.0) |
| Types of NCDsc | |
| NCD in general | 25 (29.1) |
| Diabetes | 21 (24.4) |
| CVD and stroke | 17 (19.8) |
| Chronic lung dysfunction/Asthma/COPD | 16 (18.6) |
| Cancer | 7 (8.1) |
| Risk factors addressedc | |
| Structural Factors/ Access to care/cost | 25 (30.5) |
| Hypertension | 22 (26.8) |
| Nutrition/ diet | 9 (11.0) |
| High blood glucose | 6 (7.3) |
| Social determinants | 6 (7.3) |
| Obesity/Overweight/BMI | 4 (4.9) |
| Tobacco | 4 (4.9) |
| High blood cholesterol or hyperlipidemia | 1 (1.2) |
| Other e | 5 (6.1) |
| Theme in relation to NCDsc | |
| Policy/ health system/ insurance/ pension plans | 21 (41.2) |
| Prevalence/Incidence/distribution/descriptive/diagnosis | 23 (45.1) |
| Etiology/risk factor/determinants/analytical/management and complications | 5 (9.8) |
| Prevention and Control | 2 (3.9) |
| Funding source c | |
| INGO/NGO | 10 (29.4) |
| Private/industry | 5 (14.7) |
| Governmental | 1 (2.9) |
| No funding | 2 (5.9) |
| Not applicable | 16 (47.1) |
| Health system indicators | |
| Articles that did not address any health system indicators | 17 (50.0) |
| Articles addressing at least one indicator | 17 (50.0) |
| Type of health system indicators addressed c | |
| Health service delivery | 15 (42.9) |
| Health financing | 6 (17.1) |
| Health information system | 3 (8.6) |
| Health workforce | 1 (2.9) |
The affiliations of all contributing authors were considered
bAcademic-NGOs 8(80.0), Academic-Government 1(10.0) Academic-Government -NGOs 1(10.0)
cMultiple answers were applicable
dOther include 2 articles on refugees in Europe, 1 article on refugees in Europe and Middle east, and 1 article on refugees all over the word and 3 no country specified
eOther includes family history, genetic predisposition, alcohol and other Substance abuse, physical inactivity, awareness
Fig. 2Time trend in the numbers of papers on NCDs’ research among Syrian refugees (2011–2016)
Summary of the characteristics and main findings of studies addressing NCDs among Syrian refugees (n = 19)a, b
| Title | Brief description | Findings: Prevalence of NCDs among SR | Findings Healthcare needs of SR in relation to NCDs |
|---|---|---|---|
The Provision of Health Services in Jordan to Syrian Refugees Al-Fahoum et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of adult SR ( | HT: 41% in men and 30% among women | 46% reported receiving ‘bad’ healthcare (54% men and 42% women) and 75% reporting insufficient healthcare |
| Prevalence and care-seeking for chronic diseases among Syrian refugees in Jordan Doocy et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of adults SR ( | One in two HH reported NCD (50.3%). HT (10.7%), arthritis (7.1%), DM (6.1%), CVD (4.1%) and COPD (2.9%) | Among cases who did not seek healthcare, barriers cited were: cost, not knowing where to go, could not afford transportation and no trust in the provider of care |
Health service access and utilization among Syrian refugees in Jordan Doocy et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of adult SR ( | N/A | 86.1% of HH reported an adult sought medical care the last time it was needed. 51.5% of services were sought from public sector, 38.7% private, and 9.8% in charity/NGO facilities. 51.8% of HH reported out-of pocket expenditures for medical care. |
Chronic Diseases, Lack of Medications, and Depression Among Syrian Refugees in Jordan, 2013–2014 Gammoush et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of adult SR ( | N/A | 71.9% reported not having enough medications |
Health Service Utilization among Syrian Refugees with Chronic Health Conditions in Jordan Doocy et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of adults SR ( | Prevalence of NCD (21.1%) [reasons for needing healthcare] | 51.5% sought care from public sector, 38.7% private, 9.8 NGO/charity. Cost was a main barrier for not seeking care Among those who sought healthcare, 50% reported an out of pocket payment for healthcare |
Do Chronic Diseases and Availability of Medications Predict Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) among Syrian refugees in Jordan? Al-Samdi et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of adults SR ( | N/A | 71.9% did not receive sufficient medication |
The Perceived Barriers of Health Care Among a Group of Non-camp Syrian Refugees in Jordan Ay et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of SR ( | N/A | 40.4% used PHC, 33.7% public governments, 14.6% private and 4.5 NGOs. Barriers: most frequent is cost followed by structural. Of cost, the cost of transportation was most frequent.63.6% reported an out-of-pocket expenditure for medical service. |
Health status and health needs of older refugees from Syria in Lebanon Strong et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of older adults SR ( | HT (53%), DM (38%), CVD (28), high cholesterol (22%), lung disease (11%). | Cost was the main carrier to healthcare (87%). |
Prevalence, care-seeking, and health service utilization for non-communicable diseases among Syrian refugees and host communities in Lebanon Doocy et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of SR ( | Over half (50.4%) of refugee and HC (60.2%) reported a member with NCD. Among adults: SR (HT: 7.4%, COPD: 3.8%; CVD 3.3% and DM: 3.3%). HC (HT: 10.7%, DM 6.3%, CVD 5.3%, COPD: 2.6%) | Refugees utilized (PHCC) (57.7%) most often while HC most in private clinics (62.4%). Overall, 69.7% of refugees and 82.7% of HC members reported an out-o f pocket consultation payment. |
Pilot Testing and Implementation of a mHealth tool for Non-communicable Disease in a Humanitarian Setting Doocy et al. [ | Intervention study on SR and HC ( ≥40 years or ≥ 18 with HTN or DM in 10 PHC in Lebanon | (Pilot study) | mhealth as effective tool to improve adherence to guidelines and quality of care |
Guidelines and mHealth to improve Quality of Hypertension and Type 2 Diabetes Care for Vulnerable Populations in Lebanon: Longitudinal Cohort Sudy Doocy et al. [ | Intervention study on SR and HC ( ≥40 years or ≥ 18 with HTN or DM in 10 PHC in Lebanon | mhealth as effective tool to improve adherence to guidelines and quality of care | |
Outcomes of coronary artery bypass surgery in Syrian refugees Demir et al. [ | In light of the outcomes of the surgery, the authors recommended that patients should receive therapy for chronic disorders in addition to emergency interventions. | ||
An overview of the health status of Syrian refugee children in a tertiary hospital in Turkey Bucak et al. [ | T1DM (1%). Chronic malnutrition (using anthropometry) (20%). Anemia (blood results) (50%) | ||
A refugee camp in the center of Europe: clinical charactersitics of asylum seekers arriving in Brussels Van Berlaer et al. [ | More than 7% of patients reported comorbidities ( | ||
Experience with migrants on Balkan Route from the Field Hospital on the Slovenian-Croatian Border Bydzovsky et al. [ | CVD: 11.67%, HT: 22%, COPD: 10%, DM 4.8%. | ||
On the ferries: the unmet health care needs of transiting refugees in Greece Shortall et al. [ | 39.4% of diseases were classified as NCD. | ||
Cancer awareness and Barriers to Seeking Medical Help Among Syrian Refugees in Jordan: a Baseline Study Al Qadire et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey of SR adult (18–47 years), non-camp setting ( | Most common barrier to seeking healthcare is ‘no medical insurance (83.4%). | |
Cardiovascular disease risk and prevention among Syrian refugees: mixed methods study of Medecins Sans Frontieres programme in Jordan Collins et al. [ | CVD: 20%, DM: 52%, high waist circumference: 73% | Only 23% had a documented WHO/ISH risk score documented of which 35% were | |
A Preliminary Description of Medical Complaints and Medication Consumption among 375 Syrian Refugees Residing in North Jordan Gammoh [ | CVD: 28%; HT: 25%, Respiratory diseases: 7% | N/A |
aSR Syrian refugee, HH Households, HT hypertension, DM Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, T1DM Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus, N/A not applicable
bIn this table, only original articles were described
Fig. 3Summary of main findings of studies addressing NCDs among Syrian refugees