The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review

Abstract Background Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children experience some of the highest rates of otitis media in the world. Key risk factors for otitis media in Aboriginal children in Australia are largely social and environmental factors such as overcrowded housing, poverty and limited ac...

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Main Authors: Jack DeLacy, Tinashe Dune, John J. Macdonald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08570-3
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spelling doaj-458ae33cd37e44e48b71efea8385c1a42020-11-25T01:44:06ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582020-04-012011910.1186/s12889-020-08570-3The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content reviewJack DeLacy0Tinashe Dune1John J. Macdonald2Children’s Hospital Westmead Clinical School, The University of Sydney & The Sax Institute (Study of Environment on Aboriginal Resilience and Child Health)School of Health Sciences, Western Sydney UniversitySchool of Health Sciences, Western Sydney UniversityAbstract Background Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children experience some of the highest rates of otitis media in the world. Key risk factors for otitis media in Aboriginal children in Australia are largely social and environmental factors such as overcrowded housing, poverty and limited access to services. Despite this, little is known about how to address these risk factors. A scoping content review was performed to determine the relationship between social determinants of health and otitis media in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children as described by peer-reviewed and grey literature. Method Search terms were established for location, population and health condition. The search terms were used to conduct a literature search using six health research databases. Following the exclusion process, articles were scoped, analysed and categorised using scoping parameters and a social determinants of health framework. Results Housing-related issues were the most frequently reported determinants for otitis media (56%). Two articles (4%) directly investigated the impact of social determinants of health on rates of otitis media within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. The majority of the literature (68%) highlights social determinants as playing a key role in the high rates of otitis media seen in Aboriginal populations in Australia. There were no intervention studies targeting social determinants as a means to reduce otitis media rates among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Conclusions This review identifies a disconnect between otitis media drivers and the focus of public health interventions within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations. Despite consensus that social determinants play a key role in the high rates of otitis media in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, the majority of intervention studies within the literature are focussed on biomedical approaches such as research on vaccines and antibiotics. This review highlights the need for otitis media intervention studies to shift away from a purely biomedical model and toward investigating the underlying social determinants of health. By shifting interventions upstream, otitis media rates may decrease within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, as focus is shifted away from a treatment-focussed model and toward a more preventative model.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08570-3Otitis mediaEar diseaseHearingSocial determinants of healthAboriginal and Torres Strait islanderAboriginal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jack DeLacy
Tinashe Dune
John J. Macdonald
spellingShingle Jack DeLacy
Tinashe Dune
John J. Macdonald
The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review
BMC Public Health
Otitis media
Ear disease
Hearing
Social determinants of health
Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander
Aboriginal
author_facet Jack DeLacy
Tinashe Dune
John J. Macdonald
author_sort Jack DeLacy
title The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review
title_short The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review
title_full The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review
title_fullStr The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review
title_full_unstemmed The social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in Australia: are we addressing the primary causes? A systematic content review
title_sort social determinants of otitis media in aboriginal children in australia: are we addressing the primary causes? a systematic content review
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Background Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children experience some of the highest rates of otitis media in the world. Key risk factors for otitis media in Aboriginal children in Australia are largely social and environmental factors such as overcrowded housing, poverty and limited access to services. Despite this, little is known about how to address these risk factors. A scoping content review was performed to determine the relationship between social determinants of health and otitis media in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children as described by peer-reviewed and grey literature. Method Search terms were established for location, population and health condition. The search terms were used to conduct a literature search using six health research databases. Following the exclusion process, articles were scoped, analysed and categorised using scoping parameters and a social determinants of health framework. Results Housing-related issues were the most frequently reported determinants for otitis media (56%). Two articles (4%) directly investigated the impact of social determinants of health on rates of otitis media within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. The majority of the literature (68%) highlights social determinants as playing a key role in the high rates of otitis media seen in Aboriginal populations in Australia. There were no intervention studies targeting social determinants as a means to reduce otitis media rates among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children. Conclusions This review identifies a disconnect between otitis media drivers and the focus of public health interventions within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations. Despite consensus that social determinants play a key role in the high rates of otitis media in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, the majority of intervention studies within the literature are focussed on biomedical approaches such as research on vaccines and antibiotics. This review highlights the need for otitis media intervention studies to shift away from a purely biomedical model and toward investigating the underlying social determinants of health. By shifting interventions upstream, otitis media rates may decrease within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, as focus is shifted away from a treatment-focussed model and toward a more preventative model.
topic Otitis media
Ear disease
Hearing
Social determinants of health
Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander
Aboriginal
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08570-3
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