Care seeking for diarrheal illness: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Kirsten E Wiens, Marissa H Miller, Daniel J Costello, Ashlynn P Solomon, Skye M Hilbert, Andrea G Shipper, Elizabeth C Lee, Andrew S Azman
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Abstract

Background: Monitoring and treating diarrheal illness often rely on individuals seeking care at hospitals or clinics. Cases that seek care through pharmacies and community health workers (CHW) are frequently excluded from disease burden estimates, which are used to allocate mitigation resources. Studies on care seeking behavior can help identify these gaps but typically focus on children under five, even though diarrheal diseases like cholera and Enterotoxigenic E. coli affect all age groups. This study aimed to estimate the proportion of individuals seeking care for themselves or their children with diarrhea, considering different age groups, case definitions, and study settings.

Methods and findings: We conducted a systematic review of population-based primary research studies published during 2000-2024 that examined care-seeking behavior for diarrhea. We included 166 studies from 62 countries. Hospitals and clinics were the most common source of care sought outside the home, with CHW and health posts rarely reported. Using a random-effects meta-analysis, we found substantial heterogeneity in care seeking between studies from low- and middle-income countries (I2 = 99.3) and estimated that the proportion of diarrhea cases seeking care at a hospital or clinic was 32.8% on average (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 28.1% to 37.9%; prediction interval 3.3% to 87.5%). Although there were trends toward higher care-seeking for children compared to adults, substantial variation existed between studies, and the differences were not significant. We estimated that the adjusted odds of seeking care at a hospital or clinic were significantly higher for severe diarrhea and cholera compared to general diarrhea (Odds Ratio 3.43; 95% CI 1.71 to 6.88).

Conclusions: Our findings confirm that passive surveillance through hospitals and clinics may substantially undercount the number of people with diarrhea, particularly those with milder symptoms, although this proportion varied widely. Additionally, our findings underscore the importance of including care seeking questions across all age groups in future studies, as we cannot assume lower care seeking for adults across all settings. Our study was limited by fewer data on care-seeking from health posts, traditional healers, and CHW compared to hospitals and clinics, highlighting a need for further research on these sources of care.

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腹泻疾病的求医:一项系统回顾和荟萃分析。
背景:监测和治疗腹泻疾病往往依赖于个人在医院或诊所寻求护理。通过药店和社区卫生工作者寻求治疗的病例经常被排除在用于分配缓解资源的疾病负担估计之外。对求医行为的研究可以帮助确定这些差距,但通常侧重于五岁以下的儿童,尽管霍乱和产肠毒素大肠杆菌等腹泻疾病影响所有年龄组。本研究的目的是在考虑不同年龄组、病例定义和研究环境的情况下,估计患有腹泻的个人或其子女寻求护理的比例。方法和发现:我们对2000-2024年间发表的以人群为基础的主要研究进行了系统回顾,这些研究调查了腹泻的求医行为。我们纳入了来自62个国家的166项研究。医院和诊所是家庭以外寻求护理的最常见来源,很少有卫生保健中心和卫生站的报告。使用随机效应荟萃分析,我们发现低收入和中等收入国家的研究在求医方面存在显著的异质性(i2 = 99.3),并估计在医院或诊所求医的腹泻病例比例平均为32.8%(95%置信区间(CI) 28.1%至37.9%;预测区间为3.3% ~ 87.5%)。虽然与成人相比,儿童有更高的求医倾向,但研究之间存在实质性差异,差异并不显著。我们估计,与一般腹泻相比,重症腹泻和霍乱患者在医院或诊所就诊的调整后几率明显更高(优势比3.43;95% CI 1.71 ~ 6.88)。结论:我们的研究结果证实,通过医院和诊所进行的被动监测可能大大低估了腹泻患者的数量,特别是那些症状较轻的患者,尽管这一比例差异很大。此外,我们的研究结果强调了在未来的研究中包括所有年龄组的求医问题的重要性,因为我们不能假设在所有环境中成年人的求医率都较低。与医院和诊所相比,从卫生站、传统治疗师和CHW寻求护理的数据较少,这限制了我们的研究,强调了对这些护理来源进行进一步研究的必要性。
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