Unintentional injury prevention in American Indian and Alaska Native communities: a scoping review of the Indian Health Service Primary Care Provider newsletter.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Injury Epidemiology Pub Date : 2024-06-24 DOI:10.1186/s40621-024-00509-1
Wendy Shields, Anne Kenney, Evelyn Shiang, Rebecca Malizia, Holly Billie
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Abstract

Background: Unintentional injuries disproportionately impact American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations. Developing effective and culturally tailored data collection and intervention programs requires an understanding of past prevention efforts in AI/AN communities, but limited peer-reviewed literature on the topic is available. This scoping review aims to summarize efforts that have been published in the Primary Care Provider newsletter, a source of gray literature available through the Indian Health Service.

Methods: The research team obtained all injury related articles in the Provider newsletter and excluded those that did not describe an unintentional injury prevention effort. Included articles were organized chronologically and by topic, and outcomes were described in a data abstraction form.

Results: A total of 247 articles from the Provider newsletter were screened, and 68 were included in this review. The most number of articles were published in 2007 (n = 15). Many focused not specifically on one tribal community but on the AI/AN community as a whole (n = 27), while others reported that certain tribes were the focus of study but did not identify tribes by name (n = 24). The following is a list of 14 tribal communities explicitly mentioned: Omaha, Cherokee, Ute, Yakama, Chippewa, Apache, Ho-Chunk, The Crow Tribe, Tohono O'odham Nation, Fort Mojave Tribe, Chemehuevi Tribe, The Rosebud Tribe, Navajo, and The Pueblo of Jemez. Published unintentional injury prevention efforts have covered the following 7 topics in AI/AN communities: falls, motor vehicle crashes, poisonings, improving data, burns, children, and other.

Conclusion: This scoping review makes available and searchable information on injury prevention work conducted in and for AI/AN communities that is not currently found in the peer-reviewed literature.

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美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民社区的意外伤害预防:印第安人健康服务初级保健提供者通讯的范围界定审查。
背景:意外伤害对美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)的影响尤为严重。要制定有效且符合当地文化的数据收集和干预计划,就必须了解美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民社区过去所做的预防工作,但有关该主题的同行评议文献十分有限。本范围综述旨在总结发表在《初级保健提供者通讯》上的工作,该通讯是通过印第安人卫生服务机构获得的灰色文献来源:研究小组从 "提供者 "通讯中获取了所有与伤害相关的文章,并排除了那些没有描述意外伤害预防工作的文章。纳入的文章按时间顺序和主题进行整理,并在数据摘要表中对结果进行描述:结果:共筛选出 247 篇来自 "提供商 "通讯的文章,其中 68 篇被纳入本综述。2007 年发表的文章数量最多(n = 15)。许多文章的重点不是某个部落社区,而是整个 AI/AN 社区(n = 27),还有一些文章称某些部落是研究重点,但没有指明部落名称(n = 24)。以下是明确提到的 14 个部落社区的名单:奥马哈部落、切诺基部落、尤特部落、雅卡玛部落、奇佩瓦部落、阿帕奇部落、霍-钱克部落、乌鸦部落、托霍诺-奥德汉姆部落、莫哈韦堡部落、切梅赫维部落、罗斯布德部落、纳瓦霍部落和杰梅斯普韦布洛部落。已发表的意外伤害预防工作涉及美国印第安人/美洲印第安人社区的以下 7 个主题:跌倒、机动车碰撞、中毒、改进数据、烧伤、儿童及其他:本范围审查提供了有关在阿拉斯加原住民/印第安人社区开展的伤害预防工作的可搜索信息,这些信息目前在同行评审文献中尚未发现。
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来源期刊
Injury Epidemiology
Injury Epidemiology Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
34
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Injury Epidemiology is dedicated to advancing the scientific foundation for injury prevention and control through timely publication and dissemination of peer-reviewed research. Injury Epidemiology aims to be the premier venue for communicating epidemiologic studies of unintentional and intentional injuries, including, but not limited to, morbidity and mortality from motor vehicle crashes, drug overdose/poisoning, falls, drowning, fires/burns, iatrogenic injury, suicide, homicide, assaults, and abuse. We welcome investigations designed to understand the magnitude, distribution, determinants, causes, prevention, diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and outcomes of injuries in specific population groups, geographic regions, and environmental settings (e.g., home, workplace, transport, recreation, sports, and urban/rural). Injury Epidemiology has a special focus on studies generating objective and practical knowledge that can be translated into interventions to reduce injury morbidity and mortality on a population level. Priority consideration will be given to manuscripts that feature contemporary theories and concepts, innovative methods, and novel techniques as applied to injury surveillance, risk assessment, development and implementation of effective interventions, and program and policy evaluation.
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