AI Article Synopsis

  • Southeast Asia is experiencing an epidemiological shift where non-communicable diseases are becoming more significant, but infectious diseases still persist alongside emerging health threats, complicating data-driven policy-making for health interventions.
  • A systematic review identified 542 relevant studies involving cross-sectional surveys from 2010 to 2021 across Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand, highlighting the prevalence of various health conditions within these communities.
  • Non-communicable diseases were reported more frequently in the surveys than infectious diseases; however, there was a noticeable lack of studies focusing on holistic health measures, highlighting key health issues that align with prevalent causes of morbidity and mortality in the region.

Article Abstract

Background: Southeast Asia is undergoing an epidemiological transition with non-communicable illnesses becoming increasingly important, yet infectious diseases (tuberculosis, HIV, hepatitis B, malaria) remain widely prevalent in some populations, while emerging and zoonotic diseases threaten. There are also limited population-level estimates of many important heath conditions. This restricts evidence-based decision-making for disease control and prevention priorities. Cross-sectional surveys can be efficient epidemiological tools to measure the prevalence of a wide range of diseases, but no systematic assessment of their coverage of different health conditions has been produced for the region.

Methods: We conducted a systematic search in Medline, Embase, Global Health, CINAHL, Scopus, Web of Science Core Collection, and Global Index Medicus, and additionally Google Scholar. Our inclusion criteria were cross-sectional surveys conducted with community-based recruitment, in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand, published between January 1, 2010 and January 27, 2021, and reporting the prevalence of any health condition.

Results: 542 publications from 337 surveys were included. Non-communicable conditions (n = 205) were reported by more surveys than infectious conditions (n = 124). Disability (n = 49), self-report history of any disease or symptoms (n = 35), and self-perceived health status (n = 34), which reflect a holistic picture of health, were studied by many fewer surveys. In addition, 45 surveys studied symptomatic conditions which overlap between non-communicable and infectious conditions. The most surveyed conditions were undernutrition, obesity, hypertension, diabetes, intestinal parasites, malaria, anemia, diarrhea, fever, and acute respiratory infections. These conditions overlap with the most important causes of death and disability in the Global Burden of Disease study. However, other high-burden conditions (e.g. hearing loss, headache disorder, low back pain, chronic liver and kidney diseases, and cancers) were rarely studied.

Conclusion: There were relatively few recent surveys from which to estimate representative prevalences and trends of health conditions beyond those known to be high burden. Expanding the spectrum of health conditions in cross-sectional surveys could improve understanding of evolving disease patterns in the region.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11238468PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-19347-3DOI Listing

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