减少社会隔离和孤独感的面对面干预措施:证据和差距图

IF 4 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Campbell Systematic Reviews Pub Date : 2024-05-20 DOI:10.1002/cl2.1408
Vivian Welch, Elizabeth Tanjong Ghogomu, Sierra Dowling, Victoria I. Barbeau, Ali A. A. Al-Zubaidi, Ella Beveridge, Mostafa Bondok, Payaam Desai, Rebecca Doyle, Jimmy Huang, Tarannum Hussain, Alyssa Jearvis, Fatima Jahel, Leen Madani, Wan Yuen Choo, Raudah M. Yunus, Tengku A. M. Tengku Mohd, Arpana Wadhwani, Abdulah Al Ameer, Rayan Ibrahim, Sarah Allam, Niobe Haitas, Sivan Bomze, Simone Dahrouge, Edward Garcia, Julianne Holt-Lunstad, Mathias Lasgaard, Michelle H. Lim, Kate Mulligan, Douglas M. Salzwedel, Pamela Qualter, Paul C. Hébert, Christopher Mikton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景 社会隔离和孤独可能发生在所有年龄段的人群中,它们与死亡率上升和健康状况恶化有关。越来越多的研究表明,旨在缓解社会隔离和孤独感的干预措施的效果并不一致。因此,有必要促进对这些干预措施的研究。 目的 对所有年龄组和环境中旨在减轻社会隔离和/或孤独感的亲身干预效果的现有证据进行摸底。 检索方法 检索以下数据库,检索时间从开始到 2022 年 2 月 17 日,无语言限制:Ovid MEDLINE、Embase、EBM Reviews-Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials、通过 Ovid 的 APA PsycInfo、通过 EBSCO 的 CINAHL、EBSCO(除 CINAHL 外的所有数据库)、Global Index Medicus、ProQuest(所有数据库)、ProQuest ERIC、Web of Science、Korean Citation Index、Russian Science Citation Index 和通过 Clarivate 的 SciELO Citation Index,以及 Elsevier Scopus。 筛选标准 由两名审稿人按照所列出的资格标准对可能符合条件的文章的标题、摘要和全文进行独立筛选。 数据收集与分析 我们在 Eppi-Reviewer 中开发并试用了一套数据提取代码集。我们对数据进行了单独提取和编码。我们使用 AMSTAR2 工具来评估综述的质量。但未对主要研究的质量进行评估。 主要结果 本证据和差距图共纳入了 513 篇文章(421 项主要研究和 92 篇系统性综述),对减少社会隔离和孤独感的面对面干预措施的有效性进行了评估。大部分综述(68%)被归类为极低质量,只有不到5%被归类为高质量或中等质量。大多数综述研究的是人际交往干预和社区干预,尤其是分别由健康专业人员和小组活动领导的改变认知的干预。孤独感、幸福感和抑郁/焦虑是评估最多的结果。大多数研究都是在高收入国家进行的,主要集中在美国、英国和澳大利亚,没有来自低收入国家的研究。在分别针对政策和社区结构的社会层面和以社区为基础的实施干预方面发现了主要差距。只有不到 5%的收录综述对过程指标或实施结果进行了评估。在初级研究中也发现了类似的证据和差距模式。所有年龄组都有代表,但与年轻人(≤24 岁,34%)相比,更多的综述和主要研究关注老年人(≥60 岁,63%)。三分之二的研究描述了如何识别高危人群,而对经历不平等的人群在不同公平因素下的效果差异进行评估的研究则更少。 作者的结论 越来越多的证据表明,社会隔离和孤独是公共健康问题。本证据和差距图显示了在进行搜索时,关于各年龄段和各种环境下的人际干预在减少社会隔离和孤独感方面的有效性的现有证据。尽管有大量的研究,其中大部分都是近几年发表的,但这些研究在地域上、干预类型和结果上的分布并不均衡。大多数系统性综述的质量极低,这表明我们需要高质量的综述。该地图可指导资助者和研究人员考虑缺乏证据的领域,并将这些差距作为未来研究的优先事项加以解决。
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In-person interventions to reduce social isolation and loneliness: An evidence and gap map

Background

Social isolation and loneliness can occur in all age groups, and they are linked to increased mortality and poorer health outcomes. There is a growing body of research indicating inconsistent findings on the effectiveness of interventions aiming to alleviate social isolation and loneliness. Hence the need to facilitate the discoverability of research on these interventions.

Objectives

To map available evidence on the effects of in-person interventions aimed at mitigating social isolation and/or loneliness across all age groups and settings.

Search Methods

The following databases were searched from inception up to 17 February 2022 with no language restrictions: Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, EBM Reviews—Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, APA PsycInfo via Ovid, CINAHL via EBSCO, EBSCO (all databases except CINAHL), Global Index Medicus, ProQuest (all databases), ProQuest ERIC, Web of Science, Korean Citation Index, Russian Science Citation Index, and SciELO Citation Index via Clarivate, and Elsevier Scopus.

Selection Criteria

Titles, abstracts, and full texts of potentially eligible articles identified were screened independently by two reviewers for inclusion following the outlined eligibility criteria.

Data Collection and Analysis

We developed and pilot tested a data extraction code set in Eppi-Reviewer. Data was individually extracted and coded. We used the AMSTAR2 tool to assess the quality of reviews. However, the quality of the primary studies was not assessed.

Main Results

A total of 513 articles (421 primary studies and 92 systematic reviews) were included in this evidence and gap map which assessed the effectiveness of in-person interventions to reduce social isolation and loneliness. Most (68%) of the reviews were classified as critically low quality, while less than 5% were classified as high or moderate quality. Most reviews looked at interpersonal delivery and community-based delivery interventions, especially interventions for changing cognition led by a health professional and group activities, respectively. Loneliness, wellbeing, and depression/anxiety were the most assessed outcomes. Most research was conducted in high-income countries, concentrated in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia, with none from low-income countries. Major gaps were identified in societal level and community-based delivery interventions that address policies and community structures, respectively. Less than 5% of included reviews assessed process indicators or implementation outcomes. Similar patterns of evidence and gaps were found in primary studies. All age groups were represented but more reviews and primary studies focused on older adults (≥60 years, 63%) compared to young people (≤24 years, 34%). Two thirds described how at-risk populations were identified and even fewer assessed differences in effect across equity factors for populations experiencing inequities.

Authors’ Conclusions

There is growing evidence that social isolation and loneliness are public health concerns. This evidence and gap map shows the available evidence, at the time of the search, on the effectiveness of in-person interventions at reducing social isolation and loneliness across all ages and settings. Despite a large body of research, with much of it published in more recent years, it is unevenly distributed geographically and across types of interventions and outcomes. Most of the systematic reviews are of critically low quality, indicating the need for high quality reviews. This map can guide funders and researchers to consider the areas in which the evidence is lacking and to address these gaps as future research priorities.

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来源期刊
Campbell Systematic Reviews
Campbell Systematic Reviews Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
21.90%
发文量
80
审稿时长
6 weeks
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