Prevention and assessment of infectious diseases among children and adult migrants arriving to the European Union/European Economic Association: A protocol for a suite of systematic reviews for public health and health systems

Abstract

Introduction The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control is developing evidence-based guidance for voluntary screening, treatment and vaccine prevention of infectious diseases for newly arriving migrants to the European Union/European Economic Area. The objective of this systematic review protocol is to guide the identification, appraisal and synthesis of the best available evidence on prevention and assessment of the following priority infectious diseases: tuberculosis, HIV, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, poliomyelitis (polio), Haemophilus influenza disease, strongyloidiasis and schistosomiasis. Methods and analysis The search strategy will identify evidence from existing systematic reviews and then update the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness evidence using prospective trials, economic evaluations and/or recently published systematic reviews. Interdisciplinary teams have designed logic models to help define study inclusion and exclusion criteria, guiding the search strategy and identifying relevant outcomes. We will assess the certainty of evidence using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. Ethics and dissemination There are no ethical or safety issues. We anticipate disseminating the findings through open-access publications, conference abstracts and presentations. We plan to publish technical syntheses as GRADEpro evidence summaries and the systematic reviews as part of a special edition open-access publication on refugee health. We are following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses for Protocols reporting guideline.

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Keywords

Grade, Infectious disease, Migrants, Refugees, Screening, Vaccination, Adult, Child, Communicable disease control, Communicable diseases, Delivery of health care, Emigrants and immigrants, Europe, European union, Humans, Mass screening, Public health, Research design, Transients and migrants, Diphtheria pertussis tetanus haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine, Measles mumps rubella vaccine, Article, Cinahl, Clinical assessment, Clinical effectiveness, Cochrane library, Cost effectiveness analysis, Diphtheria, Economic evaluation, Embase, Evidence based practice, Haemophilus infection, Haemophilus influenzae type b, Health care system, Hepatitis b, Hepatitis c, Human, Human immunodeficiency virus infection, Infection, Infection prevention, Intestine parasite, Measles, Medline, Migrant, Mumps, Pertussis, Poliomyelitis, Practice guideline, Prospective study, Rubella, Schistosomiasis, Strongyloidiasis, Systematic review, Tetanus, Tuberculosis, Communicable disease, Health care delivery, Methodology, Migration, Refugee

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