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Reporting of equity in observational epidemiology: A methodological review

Title: Reporting of equity in observational epidemiology: A methodological review
Authors: Dewidar, O; Al-Zubaidi, A; Bondok, M; Abdelrazeq, L; Huang, J; Jearvis, A; Barker, LC; Elmestekawy, N; Goghomu, E; Rader, T; Tufte, J; Greer-Smith, R; Waddington, HS; Nicholls, SG; Little, J; Hardy, BJ; Horsley, T; Young, T; Cuervo, LG; Sharp, MK; Chamberlain, C; Shea, B; Craig, P; Lawson, DO; Rizvi, A; Wiysonge, CS; Kredo, T; Francis, D; Kristjansson, E; Bhutta, Z; Antequera, A; Melendez-Torres, GJ; Pantoja, T; Wang, X; Jull, J; Roberts, JH; Funnell, S; White, H; Krentel, A; Mahande, MJ; Ramke, J; Wells, G; Petkovic, J; Pottie, K; Niba, L; Feng, C; Nguliefem, MN; Tugwell, P; Mbuagbaw, L; Welch, V
Publisher Information: INT SOC GLOBAL HEALTH
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: The University of Melbourne: Digital Repository
Description: BACKGROUND: Observational studies can inform how we understand and address persisting health inequities through the collection, reporting and analysis of health equity factors. However, the extent to which the analysis and reporting of equity-relevant aspects in observational research are generally unknown. Thus, we aimed to systematically evaluate how equity-relevant observational studies reported equity considerations in the study design and analyses. METHODS: We searched MEDLINE for health equity-relevant observational studies from January 2020 to March 2022, resulting in 16 828 articles. We randomly selected 320 studies, ensuring a balance in focus on populations experiencing inequities, country income settings, and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) topic. We extracted information on study design and analysis methods. RESULTS: The bulk of the studies were conducted in North America (n = 95, 30%), followed by Europe and Central Asia (n = 55, 17%). Half of the studies (n = 171, 53%) addressed general health and well-being, while 49 (15%) focused on mental health conditions. Two-thirds of the studies (n = 220, 69%) were cross-sectional. Eight (3%) engaged with populations experiencing inequities, while 22 (29%) adapted recruitment methods to reach these populations. Further, 67 studies (21%) examined interaction effects primarily related to race or ethnicity (48%). Two-thirds of the studies (72%) adjusted for characteristics associated with inequities, and 18 studies (6%) used flow diagrams to depict how populations experiencing inequities progressed throughout the studies. CONCLUSIONS: Despite over 80% of the equity-focused observational studies providing a rationale for a focus on health equity, reporting of study design features relevant to health equity ranged from 0-95%, with over half of the items reported by less than one-quarter of studies. This methodological study is a baseline assessment to inform the development of an equity-focussed reporting guideline for observational studies as an extension of ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
ISSN: 2047-2978
Relation: https://hdl.handle.net/11343/352769
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/11343/352769
Rights: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 ; CC BY
Accession Number: edsbas.ED1C9AB0
Database: BASE