The global prevalence and correlates of skin bleaching: a meta-analysis and meta-regression analysis

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Sagoe, D.
Pallesen, S.
Dlova, N.C.
Lartey, M.
Ezzedine, K.
Dadzie, O.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

International Journal of Dermatology

Abstract

PURPOSE: To estimate and investigate the global lifetime prevalence and correlates of skin bleaching. METHODS: A meta-analysis and meta-regression analysis was performed based on a systematic and comprehensive literature search conducted in Google Scholar, ISI Web of Science, ProQuest, PsycNET, PubMed, and other relevant websites and reference lists. A total of 68 studies (67,665 participants) providing original data on the lifetime prevalence of skin bleaching were included. Publication bias was corrected using the trim and fill procedure. RESULTS: The pooled (imputed) lifetime prevalence of skin bleaching was 27.7% (95% CI: 19.6-37.5, I2 = 99.6, P < 0.01). The highest significant prevalences were associated with: males (28.0%), topical corticosteroid use (51.8%), Africa (27.1%), persons aged ≤30 years (55.9%), individuals with only primary school education (31.6%), urban or semiurban residents (74.9%), patients (21.3%), data from 2010-2017 (26.8%), dermatological evaluation and testing-based assessment (24.9%), random sampling methods (29.2%), and moderate quality studies (32.3%). The proportion of females in study samples was significantly related to skin bleaching prevalence. CONCLUSION: Despite some limitations, our results indicate that the practice of skin bleaching is a serious global public health issue that should be addressed through appropriate public health interventions.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By