Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review

Structured Summary: Limited published literature and media raise serious concerns surrounding atopic dermatitis (AD) and skin infections in both pediatric and adult patients in a Canadian context (Abedi 2019; Asiniwasis et al., 2020; CBC News 2019; Dehaas 2016; Forsey 2014; FNIGC 2012/2018). A retro...

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Main Author: Asiniwasis, Rachel
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Open Science Framework 2022
Subjects:
EDI
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/tqkex
https://osf.io/tqkex/
id ftdatacite:10.17605/osf.io/tqkex
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Medicine and Health Sciences
Adult
Alaska Native
America
American Indian
Atopic
Canada
Cutaneous
Derek Chu
Dermatology
Diversity
EDI
Equity
First Nations
Health disparity
Inclusion
Indigenous
Indigenous Peoples
Inuit
Metis
Native American
North America
Pediatric
Rachel Asiniwasis
Skin
Systematic Scoping Review
United States
spellingShingle Medicine and Health Sciences
Adult
Alaska Native
America
American Indian
Atopic
Canada
Cutaneous
Derek Chu
Dermatology
Diversity
EDI
Equity
First Nations
Health disparity
Inclusion
Indigenous
Indigenous Peoples
Inuit
Metis
Native American
North America
Pediatric
Rachel Asiniwasis
Skin
Systematic Scoping Review
United States
Asiniwasis, Rachel
Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review
topic_facet Medicine and Health Sciences
Adult
Alaska Native
America
American Indian
Atopic
Canada
Cutaneous
Derek Chu
Dermatology
Diversity
EDI
Equity
First Nations
Health disparity
Inclusion
Indigenous
Indigenous Peoples
Inuit
Metis
Native American
North America
Pediatric
Rachel Asiniwasis
Skin
Systematic Scoping Review
United States
description Structured Summary: Limited published literature and media raise serious concerns surrounding atopic dermatitis (AD) and skin infections in both pediatric and adult patients in a Canadian context (Abedi 2019; Asiniwasis et al., 2020; CBC News 2019; Dehaas 2016; Forsey 2014; FNIGC 2012/2018). A retrospective study completed by Jeong et al. (2020) published in BMC identified a high level of antibiotic prescription in adults for skin infections in remote Canadian Indigenous communities, and the authors concluded that, “this population is currently hard to reach and under-represented in standard surveillance systems, and randomized retrospective chart reviews can offer complimentary methodology for monitoring disease burden, treatment, and prevention”. Although Indigenous peoples of North America are unique and diverse in geography, culture and language, they face well documented unique disparities in social determinants of health and health disparity challenges related to social and historical contexts such as residential schools, reserves as legislated segregation, and other government policies (Allan & Smylie, 2015; Waldram, 2006). As a medical dermatologist with an academic interest in dermatology and health disparities, the author (RA) has informally noted a significant gap in inclusion surrounding Indigenous health disparities in skin disease in North American dermatology literature and virtual/in-person continuing medical education events such as conferences, as well as North American clinical trial representation in common inflammatory skin diseases (eg. moderate to severe psoriasis, AD). To date, no unified body of literature exists on North American Indigenous skin disease, thus we chose a systematic scoping review to further explore this topic by providing a ‘lay of the land’. This project involves a systematic scoping review of dermatologic conditions in North American Indigenous peoples using PRISMA-ScR guidelines (Tricco et al., 2018). In keeping with Truth and Reconciliation calls to action (www.trc.ca), our objective is to systematically and formally document dermatologic disease in North American Indigenous peoples, using findings as a launchpoint for discussion, awareness, informing of future research designs, and as a part of the translational research spectrum with the ultimate and hopefully eventual goal of reducing gaps in health disparities. Sources of evidence include a systematic search of North American Indigenous skin disease using MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, and CENTRAL, with an extended search of guideline repositories of AAD, CDA, AAAI/ACAAI, CSACI, ATS, and CTS and a scoping review of Indigenous representation in Phase II, III, and IV North American clinical trials involving small molecule and biologic therapy in moderate to severe psoriasis and atopic dermatitis. Charting methods include using Rayyan platform and Excel for data entry. Once data is gathered and analyzed, results will be discussed in context of our objectives and research questions. Rationale: We chose a systematic scoping review (ScR) as the topic of North American Indigenous skin disease has not yet been comprehensively reviewed, and includes a sizable, complex and heterogenous nature (TUL, 2021). Other rationales for ScR in this context include detecting gaps in existing literature, clarifying working definitions, and organizing literature from time, location (country and context), and source (Khalil et al., 2016; Temple University Library, 2021). Objectives: To conduct a systematic scoping review using PRISMA-ScR guidelines (Tricco et al., 2018) of North American Indigenous peoples, including all age groups/sex, urban/rural with skin disease. Epidemiological patterns of Indigenous skin disease, co-morbidities and outcomes will be explored. A scoping review of Indigenous representation in North American dermatologic and atopic guidelines and in moderate to severe psoriasis and atopic dermatitis clinical trials in small molecule and biologic therapy will be completed. Research questions include: 1. What is the prevalence/epidemiological patterns of skin disease among North American Indigenous peoples? 2. What kind of research is being done in North American Indigenous Peoples? 3. Frequency of guideline and clinical trial Indigenous representation See detailed attachment for further information. What terminology/language is being used? ADDITIONAL NOTE: Our database search terminology example on MEDLINE is currently being revised as of Feb 2, 2022.
format Text
author Asiniwasis, Rachel
author_facet Asiniwasis, Rachel
author_sort Asiniwasis, Rachel
title Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review
title_short Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review
title_full Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review
title_fullStr Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review
title_full_unstemmed Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review
title_sort dermatological disease in north american indigenous peoples: a systematic scoping review
publisher Open Science Framework
publishDate 2022
url https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/tqkex
https://osf.io/tqkex/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-58.767,-58.767,-69.200,-69.200)
geographic Canada
Indian
Prisma
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
Prisma
genre First Nations
inuit
Metis
Alaska
genre_facet First Nations
inuit
Metis
Alaska
op_rights No license
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/tqkex
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spelling ftdatacite:10.17605/osf.io/tqkex 2023-05-15T16:17:20+02:00 Dermatological Disease in North American Indigenous Peoples: A Systematic Scoping Review Asiniwasis, Rachel 2022 https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/tqkex https://osf.io/tqkex/ unknown Open Science Framework No license Medicine and Health Sciences Adult Alaska Native America American Indian Atopic Canada Cutaneous Derek Chu Dermatology Diversity EDI Equity First Nations Health disparity Inclusion Indigenous Indigenous Peoples Inuit Metis Native American North America Pediatric Rachel Asiniwasis Skin Systematic Scoping Review United States article-journal ScholarlyArticle Pre-registration Text 2022 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/tqkex 2022-03-10T10:45:27Z Structured Summary: Limited published literature and media raise serious concerns surrounding atopic dermatitis (AD) and skin infections in both pediatric and adult patients in a Canadian context (Abedi 2019; Asiniwasis et al., 2020; CBC News 2019; Dehaas 2016; Forsey 2014; FNIGC 2012/2018). A retrospective study completed by Jeong et al. (2020) published in BMC identified a high level of antibiotic prescription in adults for skin infections in remote Canadian Indigenous communities, and the authors concluded that, “this population is currently hard to reach and under-represented in standard surveillance systems, and randomized retrospective chart reviews can offer complimentary methodology for monitoring disease burden, treatment, and prevention”. Although Indigenous peoples of North America are unique and diverse in geography, culture and language, they face well documented unique disparities in social determinants of health and health disparity challenges related to social and historical contexts such as residential schools, reserves as legislated segregation, and other government policies (Allan & Smylie, 2015; Waldram, 2006). As a medical dermatologist with an academic interest in dermatology and health disparities, the author (RA) has informally noted a significant gap in inclusion surrounding Indigenous health disparities in skin disease in North American dermatology literature and virtual/in-person continuing medical education events such as conferences, as well as North American clinical trial representation in common inflammatory skin diseases (eg. moderate to severe psoriasis, AD). To date, no unified body of literature exists on North American Indigenous skin disease, thus we chose a systematic scoping review to further explore this topic by providing a ‘lay of the land’. This project involves a systematic scoping review of dermatologic conditions in North American Indigenous peoples using PRISMA-ScR guidelines (Tricco et al., 2018). In keeping with Truth and Reconciliation calls to action (www.trc.ca), our objective is to systematically and formally document dermatologic disease in North American Indigenous peoples, using findings as a launchpoint for discussion, awareness, informing of future research designs, and as a part of the translational research spectrum with the ultimate and hopefully eventual goal of reducing gaps in health disparities. Sources of evidence include a systematic search of North American Indigenous skin disease using MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, and CENTRAL, with an extended search of guideline repositories of AAD, CDA, AAAI/ACAAI, CSACI, ATS, and CTS and a scoping review of Indigenous representation in Phase II, III, and IV North American clinical trials involving small molecule and biologic therapy in moderate to severe psoriasis and atopic dermatitis. Charting methods include using Rayyan platform and Excel for data entry. Once data is gathered and analyzed, results will be discussed in context of our objectives and research questions. Rationale: We chose a systematic scoping review (ScR) as the topic of North American Indigenous skin disease has not yet been comprehensively reviewed, and includes a sizable, complex and heterogenous nature (TUL, 2021). Other rationales for ScR in this context include detecting gaps in existing literature, clarifying working definitions, and organizing literature from time, location (country and context), and source (Khalil et al., 2016; Temple University Library, 2021). Objectives: To conduct a systematic scoping review using PRISMA-ScR guidelines (Tricco et al., 2018) of North American Indigenous peoples, including all age groups/sex, urban/rural with skin disease. Epidemiological patterns of Indigenous skin disease, co-morbidities and outcomes will be explored. A scoping review of Indigenous representation in North American dermatologic and atopic guidelines and in moderate to severe psoriasis and atopic dermatitis clinical trials in small molecule and biologic therapy will be completed. Research questions include: 1. What is the prevalence/epidemiological patterns of skin disease among North American Indigenous peoples? 2. What kind of research is being done in North American Indigenous Peoples? 3. Frequency of guideline and clinical trial Indigenous representation See detailed attachment for further information. What terminology/language is being used? ADDITIONAL NOTE: Our database search terminology example on MEDLINE is currently being revised as of Feb 2, 2022. Text First Nations inuit Metis Alaska DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Canada Indian Prisma ENVELOPE(-58.767,-58.767,-69.200,-69.200)