Title of article :
The Prevalence of Hepatitis C Infection in Blood Donors: A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review
Author/Authors :
Kasraian ، Leila Blood Transfusion Research Centre - High Institute for Research and Education , Hosseini ، Sahar Student Research Committee - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Salehi Marzijarani ، Mohammad Department of Biostatistics - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Ebrahimi ، Alireza Student Research Committee - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Ashkani-Esfahani ، Soheil Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Massachusetts General Hospital - Harvard Medical School
From page :
1
To page :
5
Abstract :
Context: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is one of the major bloodborne diseases worldwide. Although many screening tests were introduced and utilized for blood donations, as the main source of HCV transmission, it has still remained a global concern. Evidence Acquisition: The prevalence of HCV infection among blood donors in every country and every WHO region was investigated. A Comprehensive electronic systematic search algorithm in the international databases PubMed, ISI, Scopus, and ProQuest were adopted for articles published until October 2016, using the following keywords: ( Blood Donors OR blood donation OR donor OR donation OR blood OR blood safety OR bloodborne OR residual risk OR transfusion-transmitted infections )AND ( prevalence OR epidemiology ) in combination with “hepatitis C”OR“HCV” for hepatitis C. Only cross-sectional studies, which had appropriate measurement and sampling methods, were selected. Results: The review of the literature showed that the global prevalence of HCV was 854.09 in 100,000. The highest and lowest rates of HCV amongWHOdivisions were seen in the African region by 2503.61 and the European region by 450.21 in 100,000, respectively. The highest and lowest rates among the countries were seen in Cambodia by 14,670 and Netherlands by 25.370 in 100,000. Conclusions: Itseemsthat strategies for prevention of HCVinfection in blood donations should be considered for the policymakers; low prevalence countries are suggested to share their knowledge and countries with lower socioeconomic status should be aided to control the HCV infection among their blood donors.
Keywords :
Hepatitis C , Prevalence , Meta , Analysis , Blood Donors , Blood Safety
Journal title :
Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal
Journal title :
Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal
Record number :
2507724
Link To Document :
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