| Literature DB >> 33092048 |
Kabir Tombat1, Jitse P van Dijk1,2,3.
Abstract
The Roma are Europe's largest minority. They are also one of its most disadvantaged, with low levels of education and health and high levels of poverty. Research on Roma health often reveals higher burdens of disease in the communities studied. This paper aims to review the literature on communicable diseases among Roma across Eastern and Central Europe. A PubMed search was carried out for communicable diseases among Roma in these parts of Europe, specifically in Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Serbia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and North Macedonia. The papers were then screened for relevance and utility. Nineteen papers were selected for review; most of them from Slovakia. Roma continue to have a higher prevalence of communicable diseases and are at higher risk of infection than the majority populations of the countries they live in. Roma children in particular have a particularly high prevalence of parasitic disease. However, these differences in disease prevalence are not present across all diseases and all populations. For example, when Roma are compared to non-Roma living in close proximity to them, these differences are often no longer significant.Entities:
Keywords: Central and Eastern Europe; Roma; communicable diseases; review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33092048 PMCID: PMC7588998 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17207632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flowchart showing steps for inclusion/exclusion. * Reasons for exclusions may overlap.
Papers selected for review.
| First Author | Pub. Year | Country of Study | Quality Score 9-Point Scale * | Total Sample Size | No. of Roma within the Sample | Target Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cocu M [ | 2005 | RO | 7 | 11423 | 862 | Pregnant women |
| Kabakchieva E [ | 2006 | BG | 8 | 296 | 296 | Young Roma men |
| Gyarmathy VA [ | 2008 | HU | 6 | 64 | 50 | Convenience sample of volunteers |
| Gyarmathy VA [ | 2009 | HU | 7 | 186 | 42 | Injecting Drug Users |
| Amirkhanian YA [ | 2013 | BG | 8 | 405 | 405 | Young Roma men |
| Halánová M [ | 2013 | SK | 5 | 72 | 72 | Roma children 0–14 years |
| Veselíny E [ | 2014 | SK | 7 | 855 | 441 | HepaMeta subpopulation + |
| Halánová M [ | 2014 | SK | 6 | 340 | 208 | HepaMeta subpopulation |
| Djurovic D [ | 2014 | SRB | 3 | 118 | 59 | Hospitalised children 1–2 years |
| Hasajová A [ | 2014 | SK | 6 | 103 | 53 | Children 0-14 |
| Antolová D [ | 2015 | SK | 7 | 823 | 429 | HepaMeta subpopulation |
| Pipiková J [ | 2017 | SK | 6 | 426 | 275 | Children |
| Štrkolcová G [ | 2017 | SK | 5 | 81 | 60 | Children 0–17 |
| Antolová D [ | 2018 | SK | 7 | 823 | 429 | HepaMeta subpopulation |
| Antolová D [ | 2018 | SK | 7 | 806 | 420 | HepaMeta subpopulation |
| Halánová M [ | 2018 | SK | 7 | 264 | 195 | HepaMeta subpopulation |
| Ilisiu MB [ | 2019 | RO | 8 | 2060 | 124 | Women 18–68 |
| Fecková M [ | 2020 | SK | 6 | 1536 | 67 | Children |
| Fecková M [ | 2020 | SK | 6 | 1489 | 67 | Children |
* Quality score based on Joanna Briggs Critical Appraisal Checklist for Prevalence Studies; see Table S2. + Roma and non-Roma from settlement regions in addition to non-Roma from other regions. RO—Romania; BG—Bulgaria; HU—Hungary; SK—Slovakia; SRB—Serbia.
Viral disease (per cent).
| First Author | Pub. Year | Country | No. of Roma | Target Group | HIV | HSV * | Any Hepatitis ** | HAV | HBV | HCV | HEV | HPV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cocu M | 2005 | RO | 862 | Pregnant women | 0.6 | |||||||
| (0.1) | ||||||||||||
| Gyarmathy VA | 2008 | HU | 50 | Convenience sample of volunteers | 0.0 | 80.0 | 26.0 | 26.0 | ||||
| (0.0) | (42.9) | (28.6) | (14.3) | |||||||||
| Gyarmathy VA | 2009 | HU | 42 | Injecting Drug Users | 0.0 | 100.0 | 71.3 | |||||
| (0.0) | (56.5) | (45.1) | ||||||||||
| Amirkhanian YA | 2013 | BG | 405 | Young Roma men | 0.5 | |||||||
| Veselíny E | 2014 | SK | 441 | HepaMeta subpopulation | 52.8 | 0.7 | ||||||
| Halánová M | 2018 | SK | 195 | HepaMeta subpopulation | 21.5 | |||||||
| (7.2) | ||||||||||||
| Ilisiu MB | 2019 | RO | 124 | Women 18-68 | 6.5 | |||||||
| (15.5) |
* HSV1 or HSV2; ** HAV, HBV or HCV; RO-Romania; HU—Hungary; BG—Bulgaria; SK—Slovakia. Figures in brackets indicate prevalence among non-Roma surveyed. Empty cells indicate no data.
Parasitic disease (per cent).
| First Author | Pub. Year | Country | No. of Roma | Target Group | Trichomonas | Microsporidia | P. h. Capitis and Scabies | Cryptosporidium | Toxocara | Helminths | T. Gondii |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kabakchieva E | 2006 | BG | 296 | Young Roma men | 8.7 | ||||||
| Halánová M | 2013 | SK | 72 | Roma children 0–14 years | 30.6 | ||||||
| Djurovic D | 2014 | SRB | 59 | Hospitalised children 1–2 years | 10.0 | ||||||
| (0.0) | |||||||||||
| Hasajová A | 2014 | SK | 53 | Children 0–14 | 11.3 | ||||||
| (0.0) | |||||||||||
| Antolová D | 2015 | SK | 429 | HepaMeta subpopulation | 22.1 | ||||||
| (1.0) | |||||||||||
| Pipiková J | 2017 | SK | 275 | Children | 25.8 | ||||||
| (0.7) | |||||||||||
| Štrkolcová G | 2017 | SK | 60 | Children 0–17 | 85.0 | ||||||
| (23.8) | |||||||||||
| Antolová D | 2018 | SK | 429 | HepaMeta subpopulation |
| ||||||
| Antolová D | 2018 | SK | 420 | HepaMeta subpopulation | 45.0 | ||||||
| (24.1) | |||||||||||
| Fecková M | 2020 | SK | 67 | Children | 20.9 | ||||||
| (7.1) | |||||||||||
| Fecková M | 2020 | SK | 67 | Children | 40.3 | ||||||
| (2.3) |
* 0.5% Trichinella and 0.2% Echinococcus. BG—Bulgaria; SK—Slovakia; SRB—Serbia. Figures in brackets indicate prevalence among non-Roma surveyed. Empty cells indicate no data.
Bacterial disease (per cent).
| First Author | Pub. Year | Country | No. of Roma | Target Group | Chlamydia | Gonorrhoea | Syphilis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kabakchieva E | 2006 | BG | 296 | Young Roma men | 8.0 | 4.5 | 3.5 |
| Gyarmathy VA | 2008 | HU | 50 | Convenience sample of volunteers | 1.8 | ||
| (0.0) | |||||||
| Gyarmathy VA | 2009 | HU | 42 | Injecting Drug Users |
| 0.0 |
|
| Amirkhanian YA | 2013 | BG | 405 | Young Roma men | 5.2 | 3.7 | 0.0 |
| Halánová M | 2014 | SK | 208 | HepaMeta subpopulation | 7.2 | ||
| (5.3) |
* 16.7% (8.3%) positive for either chlamydia or syphilis. BG—Bulgaria; HU—Hungary; SK—Slovakia. Figures in brackets indicate prevalence among non-Roma surveyed. Empty cells indicate no data.