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Defining indicators for disease burden, health outcomes, policies and barriers and facilitators to health services for migrant populations in the Middle East and North African region: a protocol for a suite of systematic reviews

Authors :
Charles Agyemang
Ali Ardalan
Farah Seedat
Bouchra Assarag
Nuria Casamitjana
Kolitha Wickramage
Sally Hargreaves
Ana Requena-Mendez
Fouad M Fouad
Dominik Zenner
Anna Deal
Stella Evangelidou
Wafa Saidi
Chiaki Ito
Oumnia Bouaddi
Moudrick Abdellatifi
Alba Cuxart-Graell
Hassan Edries
Eman Elafef
Taha Maatoug
Anissa Ouahchi
Liv Mathilde Pampiri
Sara Arias
Adel Abdelkhalek
Ahmed Hamed Arisha
Ibrahim Ahmed Bani
Aasmaa Chaoui
Wafa Chemao-Elfihri
Kenza Hassouni
Mahmoud Hilali
Mohamed Khalis
Wejdene Mansour
Ali Mtiraoui
MENA Migrant Health Working Group
Asad Adam
Adnene Ben Haj Aissa
Salma Altyib
Hanen Ben Belgacem
Imane Belkhammar
Thomas Calvot
Luciana Ceretti
Nelly Chavassieux
Hassan Chrifi
Mohamed Douagi
Algdail Elnil
Gonzalo Fanjul
Ahmed Hamed
Abdedayem Khelifi
Lora Makhlouf
Maissa Mokni
Davide Olchini
Tarik Oufkir
Nasong Park
Giuseppe Raffa
Sandra Santafé
Alice Sironi
Fatma Temimi
Zeineb Turki
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 14, Iss 7 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Introduction The Middle East and North African (MENA) region is characterised by high and complex migration flows, yet little is known about the health of migrant populations, their levels of underimmunisation and access to healthcare provision. Data are needed to support regional elimination and control targets for key diseases and the design and delivery of programmes to improve health outcomes in these groups. This protocol describes a suite of seven systematic reviews that aim to identify, appraise and synthesise the available evidence on the burden and health outcomes, policies and access (barriers and facilitators) related to these mobile populations in the region.Methods Seven systematic reviews will cover three questions to explore the: (1) burden and health outcomes, (2) policies and (3) healthcare barriers and facilitators for the following seven disease areas in migrants in the MENA region: tuberculosis, HIV and hepatitis B and C, malaria and neglected tropical diseases, diabetes, mental health, maternal and neonatal health, and vaccine-preventable diseases. We will search electronic databases for studies in any language (year 2000–2023), reference-check relevant publications and cross-check included studies with experts. We will search for grey literature by hand searching key databases and websites (including regional organisations and MoH websites) for country-specific guidelines and talking to our network of experts for local and regional reports and key datasets. We will assess the studies and policies for their quality using appropriate tools. We will meta-analyse the data by disease outcome if they are of sufficient volume and similarity. Where meta-analysis is not possible and where data are on policy or access, we will narratively synthesise the evidence using summary tables, figures and text.Dissemination We anticipate disseminating the findings through peer-reviewed publications, conferences and other formats relevant to all stakeholders. We are following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines and protocols will be registered on International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5d257db451542a4833642f50d6853f2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-083813