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Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors

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Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors. / Pega, Frank; Momen, Natalie C.; Bero, Lisa A. et al.
In: Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source, Vol. 21, 64, 06.07.2022.

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APA

Pega, F., Momen, N. C., Bero, L. A., & Whaley, P. (2022). Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors. Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source, 21, Article 64. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12940-022-00878-4

Vancouver

Pega F, Momen NC, Bero LA, Whaley P. Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors. Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source. 2022 Jul 6;21:64. doi: 10.1186/s12940-022-00878-4

Author

Pega, Frank ; Momen, Natalie C. ; Bero, Lisa A. et al. / Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors. In: Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source. 2022 ; Vol. 21.

Bibtex

@article{2214ecf4b0cb48d9b0ea338b6c6baba8,
title = "Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors",
abstract = "Exposure prevalence studies (as here defined) record the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors to human health. Applying systematic review methods to the synthesis of these studies would improve the rigour and transparency of normative products produced based on this evidence (e.g., exposure prevalence estimates). However, a dedicated framework, including standard methods and tools, for systematically reviewing exposure prevalence studies has yet to be created. We describe the need for this framework and progress made towards it through a series of such systematic reviews that the World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization conducted for their WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury (WHO/ILO Joint Estimates).We explain that existing systematic review frameworks for environmental and occupational health cannot be directly applied for the generation of exposure prevalence estimates because they seek to synthesise different types of evidence (e.g., intervention or exposure effects on health) for different purposes (e.g., identify intervention effectiveness or exposure toxicity or carcinogenicity). Concepts unique to exposure prevalence studies (e.g., “expected heterogeneity”: the real, non-spurious variability in exposure prevalence due to exposure changes over space and/or time) also require new assessment methods. A framework for systematic reviews of prevalence of environmental and occupational exposures requires adaptation of existing methods (e.g., a standard protocol) and development of new tools or approaches (e.g., for assessing risk of bias and certainty of a body of evidence, including exploration of expected heterogeneity).As part of the series of systematic reviews for the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates, the World Health Organization collaborating with partners has created a preliminary framework for systematic reviews of prevalence studies of exposures to occupational risk factors. This included development of protocol templates, data extraction templates, a risk of bias assessment tool, and an approach for assessing certainty of evidence in these studies. Further attention and efforts are warranted from scientific and policy communities, especially exposure scientists and policy makers, to establish a standard framework for comprehensive and transparent systematic reviews of studies estimating prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors, to improve estimates, risk assessments and guidelines.",
keywords = "Systematic reviews, Systematic review methods, Prevalence, Exposures, Environmental health, Occupational health",
author = "Frank Pega and Momen, {Natalie C.} and Bero, {Lisa A.} and Paul Whaley",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1186/s12940-022-00878-4",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
journal = "Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source",
issn = "1476-069X",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards a framework for systematic reviews of the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors

AU - Pega, Frank

AU - Momen, Natalie C.

AU - Bero, Lisa A.

AU - Whaley, Paul

PY - 2022/7/6

Y1 - 2022/7/6

N2 - Exposure prevalence studies (as here defined) record the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors to human health. Applying systematic review methods to the synthesis of these studies would improve the rigour and transparency of normative products produced based on this evidence (e.g., exposure prevalence estimates). However, a dedicated framework, including standard methods and tools, for systematically reviewing exposure prevalence studies has yet to be created. We describe the need for this framework and progress made towards it through a series of such systematic reviews that the World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization conducted for their WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury (WHO/ILO Joint Estimates).We explain that existing systematic review frameworks for environmental and occupational health cannot be directly applied for the generation of exposure prevalence estimates because they seek to synthesise different types of evidence (e.g., intervention or exposure effects on health) for different purposes (e.g., identify intervention effectiveness or exposure toxicity or carcinogenicity). Concepts unique to exposure prevalence studies (e.g., “expected heterogeneity”: the real, non-spurious variability in exposure prevalence due to exposure changes over space and/or time) also require new assessment methods. A framework for systematic reviews of prevalence of environmental and occupational exposures requires adaptation of existing methods (e.g., a standard protocol) and development of new tools or approaches (e.g., for assessing risk of bias and certainty of a body of evidence, including exploration of expected heterogeneity).As part of the series of systematic reviews for the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates, the World Health Organization collaborating with partners has created a preliminary framework for systematic reviews of prevalence studies of exposures to occupational risk factors. This included development of protocol templates, data extraction templates, a risk of bias assessment tool, and an approach for assessing certainty of evidence in these studies. Further attention and efforts are warranted from scientific and policy communities, especially exposure scientists and policy makers, to establish a standard framework for comprehensive and transparent systematic reviews of studies estimating prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors, to improve estimates, risk assessments and guidelines.

AB - Exposure prevalence studies (as here defined) record the prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors to human health. Applying systematic review methods to the synthesis of these studies would improve the rigour and transparency of normative products produced based on this evidence (e.g., exposure prevalence estimates). However, a dedicated framework, including standard methods and tools, for systematically reviewing exposure prevalence studies has yet to be created. We describe the need for this framework and progress made towards it through a series of such systematic reviews that the World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization conducted for their WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury (WHO/ILO Joint Estimates).We explain that existing systematic review frameworks for environmental and occupational health cannot be directly applied for the generation of exposure prevalence estimates because they seek to synthesise different types of evidence (e.g., intervention or exposure effects on health) for different purposes (e.g., identify intervention effectiveness or exposure toxicity or carcinogenicity). Concepts unique to exposure prevalence studies (e.g., “expected heterogeneity”: the real, non-spurious variability in exposure prevalence due to exposure changes over space and/or time) also require new assessment methods. A framework for systematic reviews of prevalence of environmental and occupational exposures requires adaptation of existing methods (e.g., a standard protocol) and development of new tools or approaches (e.g., for assessing risk of bias and certainty of a body of evidence, including exploration of expected heterogeneity).As part of the series of systematic reviews for the WHO/ILO Joint Estimates, the World Health Organization collaborating with partners has created a preliminary framework for systematic reviews of prevalence studies of exposures to occupational risk factors. This included development of protocol templates, data extraction templates, a risk of bias assessment tool, and an approach for assessing certainty of evidence in these studies. Further attention and efforts are warranted from scientific and policy communities, especially exposure scientists and policy makers, to establish a standard framework for comprehensive and transparent systematic reviews of studies estimating prevalence of exposure to environmental and occupational risk factors, to improve estimates, risk assessments and guidelines.

KW - Systematic reviews

KW - Systematic review methods

KW - Prevalence

KW - Exposures

KW - Environmental health

KW - Occupational health

U2 - 10.1186/s12940-022-00878-4

DO - 10.1186/s12940-022-00878-4

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

JO - Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source

JF - Environmental Health : A Global Access Science Source

SN - 1476-069X

M1 - 64

ER -