Rayanne Alves de Oliveira, M. S. Neto, Adriana Gomes Nogueira Ferreira, Ana Lúcia Fernandes Pereira, Lívia Maia Pascoal, Janaína Miranda Bezerra, Richard Pereira Dutra
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Searches were carried out in the Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO) and the Scopus, Web of Science and National Library of Medicine (PubMed) databases in June 2021. Original studies in Portuguese, English or Spanish, without time frame, excluding studies with a specific age group or with an audience with specific comorbidity, were used. A total of 25 studies were included, with findings in different scenarios around the world. Factors such as age, sex, pre-existing diseases were associated with deaths due to COVID-19, which had a heterogeneous spatial distribution and occurred in environmental, socioeconomic and geographic conditions peculiar to these territories. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景和目标:了解与COVID-19死亡相关的临床流行病学和环境因素及其空间分布,可以作为指导和实施针对弱势人群的更有效卫生行动的补贴。因此,目标是综合与全球COVID-19死亡风险因素和空间分布相关的科学证据。内容:这是一篇综合文献综述,提出了以下指导性问题:全球COVID-19死亡风险因素和空间分布的科学证据是什么?检索于2021年6月在科学电子图书馆在线(SciELO)和Scopus、Web of Science和国家医学图书馆(PubMed)数据库中进行。使用葡萄牙语、英语或西班牙语的原始研究,没有时间框架,排除了特定年龄组的研究或有特定合并症的研究。共纳入了25项研究,在世界各地的不同情况下得出了结论。年龄、性别、已有疾病等因素与COVID-19造成的死亡有关,这些死亡具有异质空间分布,发生在这些领土特有的环境、社会经济和地理条件下。结论:年龄≥60岁、男性、心血管疾病、糖尿病、环境污染大、人口密度大、卫生条件不稳定的地理区域影响COVID-19的死亡率。
Risk factors and spatial distribution associated with deaths due to COVID-19: an integrative review
Background and objectives: understanding the clinical-epidemiological and environmental factors related to deaths due to COVID-19 and their distribution in space can serve as subsidies to direct and implement more effective health actions for vulnerable populations. Thus, the objective was to synthesize the scientific evidence related to risk factors and spatial distribution of deaths due to COVID-19 in the world. Content: this is an integrative literature review, and the following guiding question emerged: what is the scientific evidence related to risk factors and spatial distribution of deaths due to COVID-19 in the world? Searches were carried out in the Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO) and the Scopus, Web of Science and National Library of Medicine (PubMed) databases in June 2021. Original studies in Portuguese, English or Spanish, without time frame, excluding studies with a specific age group or with an audience with specific comorbidity, were used. A total of 25 studies were included, with findings in different scenarios around the world. Factors such as age, sex, pre-existing diseases were associated with deaths due to COVID-19, which had a heterogeneous spatial distribution and occurred in environmental, socioeconomic and geographic conditions peculiar to these territories. Conclusion: age equal to or greater than 60 years, males, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus and geographic areas with greater environmental pollution, greater population density and precarious sanitary conditions influenced the mortality of COVID-19.