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https://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/36249
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ArtigoDireito Autoral
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Objetivos de Desenvolvimento Sustentável
11 Cidades e comunidades sustentáveisColeções
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URBANISATION AND ASTHMA IN LOW-INCOME AND MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE URBAN-RURAL DIFFERENCES IN ASTHMA PREVALENCE
Autor(es)
Afiliação
Faculty of Epidemiology and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Population Health. London, UK / Universidad Internacional del Ecuador. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la Salud y la Vida. Quito, Ecuador / Fundación Ecuatoriana para la Investigación en Salud. Quito, Ecuador.
Faculty of Epidemiology and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Population Health. London, UK.
Faculty of Epidemiology and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Population Health. London, UK.
Population Health Research Institute. London, UK.
Universidad Federal da Bahia. Instituto de Saude Coletiva. Salvador, BA, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de de Integração de Dados e Conhecimentos para Saúde. Salvador, BA, Brasil.
Universidad Internacional del Ecuador. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la Salud y la Vida. Quito, Ecuador / Fundación Ecuatoriana para la Investigación en Salud. Quito, Ecuador / St George’s University of London. Institute of Infection and Immunity. London, UK.
Faculty of Epidemiology and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Population Health. London, UK.
Faculty of Epidemiology and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Population Health. London, UK.
Population Health Research Institute. London, UK.
Universidad Federal da Bahia. Instituto de Saude Coletiva. Salvador, BA, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de de Integração de Dados e Conhecimentos para Saúde. Salvador, BA, Brasil.
Universidad Internacional del Ecuador. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas de la Salud y la Vida. Quito, Ecuador / Fundación Ecuatoriana para la Investigación en Salud. Quito, Ecuador / St George’s University of London. Institute of Infection and Immunity. London, UK.
Resumo em Inglês
Urbanisation has been associated with temporal and geographical differences in asthma prevalence in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). However, little is known of the mechanisms by which urbanisation and asthma are associated, perhaps explained by the methodological approaches used to assess the urbanisation-asthma relationship. Objective This review evaluated how epidemiological
studies have assessed the relationship between asthma
and urbanisation in LMICs, and explored urban/rural
differences in asthma prevalence.
Methods Asthma studies comparing urban/rural areas,
comparing cities and examining intraurban variation
were assessed for eligibility. Included publications were
evaluated for methodological quality and pooled OR
were calculated to indicate the risk of asthma in urban
over rural areas.
Results Seventy articles were included in our analysis.
Sixty-three compared asthma prevalence between
urban and rural areas, five compared asthma prevalence
between cities and two examined intraurban variation
in asthma prevalence. Urban residence was associated
with a higher prevalence of asthma, regardless of asthma
definition: current-wheeze OR:1.46 (95% CI:1.22 to
1.74), doctor diagnosis OR:1.89 (95% CI:1.47 to 2.41),
wheeze-ever OR:1.44 (95% CI:1.15 to 1.81), selfreported
asthma OR:1.77 (95% CI:1.33 to 2.35), asthma
questionnaire OR:1.52 (95% CI:1.06 to 2.16) and
exercise challenge OR:1.96 (95% CI:1.32 to 2.91).
Conclusions Most evidence for the relationship
between urbanisation and asthma in LMICs comes
from studies comparing urban and rural areas. These
studies tend to show a greater prevalence of asthma in
urban compared to rural populations. However, these
studies have been unable to identify which specific
characteristics of the urbanisation process may be
responsible. An approach to understand how different
dimensions of urbanisation, using contextual household
and individual indicators, is needed for a better
understanding of how urbanisation affects asthma.
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