Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T05:40:07.219Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chapter 11 - Syndemics

from Section 3 - Key Concepts for Biosocial Research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2024

Michelle Pentecost
Affiliation:
King's College London
Jaya Keaney
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
Tessa Moll
Affiliation:
University of the Witwatersrand
Michael Penkler
Affiliation:
University of Applied Sciences, Wiener Neustadt

Summary

Recognising how early experiences frame and impact later health is a key concern for DOHaD. However, rarely in DOHaD studies are the synergistic characteristics of diseases throughout the lifecourse a central focus. Syndemic theory posits that disease concentrations (where diseases cluster together) and disease interactions (what adverse effects result from the clustering) cause more health adversity due to their synergistic dynamics. In this chapter, we consider how syndemic theory can contribute meaningfully to DOHaD studies because it considers how and why diseases occur, cluster, and interact across the lifecourse and integrates a synergistic understanding of early stressors and long-term adverse health. We describe the history of the syndemic concept and discuss the synergies of syndemic and DOHaD theory. We draw on our work with the ‘Birth to Thirty’ birth cohort based at the Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit (DPHRU) at the University of the Witwatersrand to provide some examples of how social, psychological, and biological factors cluster and drive health and disease over a lifetime.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Handbook of DOHaD and Society
Past, Present, and Future Directions of Biosocial Collaboration
, pp. 141 - 147
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

11.1 Introduction

Recognising how early experiences frame and impact later health is a central focus of DOHaD. However, rarely in DOHaD studies are the synergistic characteristics of diseases throughout the lifecourse a central focus. Syndemic theory can enhance our understanding of health over the lifecourse by integrating a more synergistic understanding of early stressors and long-term adverse health, often caused by the interactions of health and social conditions. Syndemic theory posits that disease concentrations (where diseases cluster together) and disease interactions (what adverse effects result from the clustering) cause more health adversity due to their synergistic dynamics. Moreover, because the clusters and interactions of health conditions share upstream drivers, designing interventions to mitigate one condition may have larger-scale impacts on health and well-being. In this way, syndemic theory can contribute meaningfully to DOHaD studies because it considers how and why diseases occur, cluster, and interact across the lifecourse. Further, DOHaD thinking is inherent to syndemic theory, which recognises how chronic stress and inflammation over the lifecourse can play central roles in the interaction and exacerbation of certain infectious and/or non-infectious health conditions. Recognising how and why health conditions cluster together, and what factors from early life through adolescence may have a major impact on adult multi-morbidities, can advance both DOHaD and syndemic thinking.

In this chapter, we consider how syndemic thinking can advance DOHaD scholarship by critically engaging with the synergistic underlying conditions of early life that profoundly affect health and disease in later life. In what follows, we describe the history of the syndemics framework and provide a few examples of how the framework has been used in other studies. We discuss the synergies of syndemic and DOHaD theory. We draw on our work with the ‘Birth to Thirty’ birth cohort based at the Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit (DPHRU) at the University of the Witwatersrand to provide some examples of how social, psychological, and biological factors cluster and drive health and disease over a lifetime, and demonstrate how the syndemic framework may benefit DOHaD research.

11.2 History of Syndemic Theory

The term syndemics was first proposed by Merrill Singer [Reference Singer1] to demonstrate how socio-economic, political, or environmental factors influenced the frequently co-occurring problems of substance abuse, violence, and HIV. Singer and Clair [Reference Singer and Clair2] defined syndemics as a set of intertwined and mutually enhancing epidemics involving disease interactions at the biological level that develop and are sustained in a community/population because of harmful social conditions and injurious social connections. Singer argued that the synergies of epidemics are crucial for understanding what diseases emerge, where, and why. Specifically, syndemics theory focuses on disease concentration (the where) and disease interactions (the how) and provides a framework for understanding what drives disease clusters and for designing interventions that might mitigate these effects. Others have described syndemics by thinking about interactions of ‘people, place, and time’ and as a ‘constellation of affliction’ [Reference Milstein3]. In many ways, the syndemics framework provides a clear way of thinking about disease: rarely does an individual or population experience a disease in isolation from other conditions – such as social, political, or historical contexts where people live.

Singer first proposed the SAVA Syndemic, showing how substance abuse, violence, and AIDS cannot be understood in isolation among inner-city residents of Hartford, Connecticut. Singer argued that the local HIV epidemic could not be dissociated from the local epidemic of substance abuse and that the pathways of transmission were inextricably linked and deepened by structural violence [Reference Singer1]. In this way, Singer emphasised that understanding local history and social context was fundamental for understanding the social life of an infectious disease. The SAVA syndemic framework is now widely used to develop interventions in the field of HIV/AIDS, while recognising that the interactions between and concentration of diseases have a history and may share an origin. This framing provides clear pathways for intervention, such as through integrating mental health and substance use interventions for the prevention of and living with HIV.

Three rules frame syndemic thinking [Reference Singer1, Reference Singer and Clair2], and these rules are crucial for defining what comprises a syndemic and what does not [Reference Tsai4]. First, two or more diseases concentrate within a population. In many cases, this relationship is well documented in the epidemiological literature, often cited as a comorbid or multi-morbid relationship. Second, disease interactions are measurable through bio-bio, bio-social, or bio-psychological pathways, which may include anything from well-documented interactions in biology (such as inflammation) to cultural dynamics (like stigma). Third, macro-scale forces precipitate disease clustering, framed by factors at the macro-level (such as structural violence) to meso-level (such as immigration or gender-based policy) and micro-level (such as interpersonal violence or chronic food insecurity). DOHaD takes a similarly integrative approach, recognising how early exposures to adversity and chronic stress, particularly in relation to nutrition, can profoundly shape disease risk later in life. It is this adversity and the diseases that emerge that often become syndemic; chronic stress and inflammation are closely linked to non-communicable diseases, and these conditions increase the risk for or compromise health when one confronts infections like HIV. It is these underlying conditions, and the weakening of immune function, that compromise one’s ability to fight off or live well when multiple serious conditions concentrate together within individuals and communities. The elevated risk of morbidity and mortality among people with such conditions, who are socially and economically marginalised, was exemplified by the recent COVID-19 crisis.

Another example is the syndemic of violence, racist immigration policy, diabetes, depression, and abuse (verbal, emotional, physical, or sexual) among Mexican immigrant women living in the Chicago metropolitan area, as described by Emily Mendenhall [Reference Mendenhall5]. In a mixed-methods study consisting of data collected through life history narrative interviews, biological specimens, and validated psychiatric instruments, Mendenhall describes how interpersonal violence and fear (bound to immigration policy) drove distress. These experiences linked stress and trauma from undocumented migration and navigating a racist immigration system to the deleterious effects of living with chronic illness (type 2 diabetes) amidst financial uncertainty. In this case, the adverse health effects of these larger forces, often obscured, could be observed in the epidemiological data demonstrating the close biological and psychological links between depression and type 2 diabetes [Reference Mendenhall5, Reference Lynch, Fernandez, Lighthouse, Mendenhall and Jacobs6]. A central focus of this work was to describe how study participants, despite seeking care for diabetes or being identified by the state as having diabetes (e.g. via Medicaid), could not become well without psychological healing and overcoming structural barriers like a lack of safety and food [Reference Mendenhall, Seligman, Fernandez and Jacobs7]. In this way, their diabetes was entangled in a feedback loop with traumatic memories, family stress, chronic financial uncertainty, and untreated depression that required nuanced care and support from the clinic, their community, and their families [Reference Mendenhall5].

These examples illustrate how syndemic co-factors build throughout a lifetime. DOHaD studies can emphasise at what time and in what ways interventions for one aspect of a syndemic may elevate overall health and well-being by lessening the interactions within and among syndemic problems [Reference Soepnel, McKinley and Klingberg8] – in this way, syndemic and DOHaD theories are complementary and synergistic.

11.3 How Syndemics Thinking and DOHaD Studies Are Inherently Synergistic

Understanding the social and biological histories of people is as fundamental to the syndemic framework as it is for DOHaD studies. Histories of disease have long engaged with a ‘disease biography’ approach – where diseases are viewed as biological entities, overlooking how diseases become interconnected and co-occur through social and political processes [Reference Proctor9, Reference Newfield10]. Thinking about the rise and decline of syndemics across time, as well as intergenerationally, provides an opportunity to recognise the fundamental role of contexts and driving forces that underlie how and why diseases interact within bodies and populations in a certain time and place. Studies central to driving DOHaD scholarship, such as of the 1944 Dutch Hunger Winter famines [Reference Roseboom, de Rooij and Painter11] and other famines such as in China and Nigeria [Reference Heijmans, Tobi and Stein12, Reference Song, Wang and Hu13], can provide situational evidence for why and how socio-political contexts may have affected biological risk for disease later in life or across generations. DOHaD studies emphasise how experiences of deprivation can provoke multiple and overlapping chronic conditions later in life, but rarely do they emphasise how these synergistic interactions occur and why. In many ways, DOHaD studies are already thinking syndemically, but making these links clearer, with a focus on interactions that perpetuate disease experiences, can provide clearer modes for intervention [Reference El Hajj, Schneider, Lehnen and Haaf14]. Using syndemic theory in DOHaD research could push forward an understanding of the connectedness of synergistic conditions through time and across space. This allows for syndemics to be studied historically and may allow researchers to fundamentally understand current syndemics and anticipate future ones.

Another attractive aspect of syndemics framework is its broad applicability to conditions or diseases that commonly cluster together such as malnutrition, obesity, and diabetes; HIV and TB; and HIV and non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and mental health [Reference Mendenhall15]. This provides a chance to develop interventions that respond to these diseases concurrently and in an integrative manner as opposed to dealing with individual diseases. Further, preventing syndemics requires not only prevention or control of each disease, respectively, but also understanding and controlling the forces that tie the diseases together. Insights gained from understanding syndemics (e.g. HIV syndemics research) can then be transferred and applied to other syndemics.

Syndemics often emphasise how deleterious social and political conditions such as poverty, food insecurity, inequalities, or political instabilities expose populations to disease clustering and interactions across the lifecourse [Reference Manderson and Ross16]. These factors further shape disease burden, from immune responses to healthcare access. The reverse is also true; disease burden and limited access to healthcare may influence social and economic conditions or processes [Reference Douglas-Vail17]. For DOHaD research, the syndemic framework may allow researchers to understand diseases holistically by examining how biological synergisms cluster and are worsened by social and structural forces. In other words, the syndemics framework may shed some light on inequalities in diseases and health and why some people suffer more than others within or outside the same geographical locations. For instance, although conditions like type 2 diabetes have been associated with old age [Reference Kalyani, Golden and Cefalu18], we know that insulin resistance can emerge and afflict younger people in part because economic pressures and intensified economic inequalities cause increasing stress, and viral and metabolic conditions are increasingly linked [Reference Mendenhall, Richter, Stein and Norris19Reference Yates-Doerr22]. This may best be exemplified in countries such as South Africa that have experienced extraordinary social and political changes [Reference Moodley, Christofides, Norris, Achia and Hofman23]. Metabolic disease appears to emerge at earlier ages in South Africa and makes people sicker faster compared to other developed countries [Reference Barnett, Mercer, Norbury, Watt, Wyke and Guthrie24, Reference Gluckman, Hanson and Mitchell25].

While DOHaD interventions often focus on child, maternal, and preconception health as influential for health across the lifecourse, a syndemic lens is useful to foreground the social or environmental challenges that interact in the early life period to influence well-being. For example, part of our collaborative work in South Africa under the Healthy Life Trajectory Initiative (HeLTI) has suggested that women suffer considerably because of long-term exposure to hardships, poverty, and intergenerational conflicts at home [Reference Cohen, Ware, Prioreschi, Draper and Bosire26]. Women may also frequently parent alone, in part due to parental separations and the early departure of the father in the context of women giving birth before marriage [Reference Cohen, Ware, Prioreschi, Draper and Bosire26]. Women with girl children, fearing for their daughters’ futures, sometimes exert undue pressure on their children to achieve educational goals and find secure employment before marriage or childrearing, but this can lead to significant intergenerational tensions. Daughters express stress, anger, anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideations [Reference Cohen, Ware, Prioreschi, Draper and Bosire26], which may affect the risk of early pregnancy [Reference Bouvette-Turcot, Unternaehrer and Gaudreau27]. Patriarchal culture plays a crucial role in girls’ experiences, where a hierarchy of power and privilege that typically favours men over women, and boys over girls, affects access to food, school, jobs, emotional support, and other crucial aspects of well-being. This then reinforces a systemic inequality that undermines the rights of women and girls and restricts the opportunity for women, men, and gender minorities to express their authentic selves.

This example illustrates the complex social dynamics that affect young people’s health, from ways of thinking about sexuality and power to financial security, emotional support, and conceptualisations of a healthy life and well-being. Social, psychological, and biological conditions emerge and interact in different ways throughout the lifecourse. By disentangling how conditions interact and perpetuate one other, clinical programmes can integrate mental and physical healthcare, and policymakers can also prioritise community-based interventions, given that, as we have found in Soweto, people engage in health-seeking far beyond the clinic and can improve their overall health and well-being by engaging in activities that may be religious or relational [Reference Bosire, Cele, Potelwa, Cho and Mendenhall28].

Moreover, syndemic theory can advance DOHaD studies as it highlights where, when, and how disease concentration or interaction is likely to occur across the lifecourse. For example, households that are exposed to violence (e.g. gender-based violence including intimate partner violence, child maltreatment, or early marriages) may have consequential impacts in later life. Studies have shown that children born in households that experience violence may have developmental delays first seen in infancy; anxiety and mood disorder symptoms and poor peer relationships first seen in childhood; substance use, abuse, or addiction or a diagnosis of substance use disorder often first seen in adolescence; and increased risk for personality and other psychiatric disorders and relationship problems during adulthood [Reference Norman, Byambaa, De, Butchart, Scott and Vos29]. Other research shows that among people exposed to major psychological stressors in childhood, there are elevated rates of morbidity and mortality from chronic diseases of ageing [Reference Miller, Chen and Parker30]. Understanding such factors can enable the development of timely interventions to ensure that disease clustering does not happen.

In sum, syndemic thinking in DOHaD studies can illuminate how macro-scale factors such as structural violence, meso-level factors such as health policies, and micro-level factors such as intimate partner violence influence disease clustering and interactions and produce poor health outcomes.

11.4 Conclusion

Syndemic theory facilitates an understanding of the cumulative effects of social and environmental influences, and how these interact with other variables such as demographic, biological, genetic, and epigenetic factors across the lifecourse. The syndemic framework underscores a need to focus on social inequality as a root cause of syndemic clustering and interactions and demonstrates that population-level disease prevention can only occur by addressing the large-scale social and structural forces that shape both individual and population health. In addition, addressing harmful or injurious forces at family, community, and population levels can help reduce disease clustering or interactions now and later in life. In this sense, the syndemic framework can highlight ‘hotspots’ where there is a high likelihood of disease clustering now or in the future and provide an opportunity to intervene before the clustering and interaction take place. Finally, the syndemic framework provides an avenue for interdisciplinary research – as it focuses on multi-layered factors that shape disease distribution at the population level. Thus, integrating syndemics in DOHaD studies may enhance cross-disciplinary research. The framework also enables researchers to address one of the greatest barriers to health improvements: the failure to examine linked phenomena. Syndemic theory allows researchers to move beyond understanding the proximate causes of diseases and draws attention to the processes that create clusters of disease and noxious living conditions for particular populations, affected by a particular condition. It is therefore imperative for DOHaD to think syndemically to understand disease patterns across different time periods.

References

Singer, M. A dose of drugs, a touch of violence, a case of AIDS: Conceptualizing the SAVA syndemic. Free Inq Creat Sociol. 1996;24(2):99110.Google Scholar
Singer, M, Clair, S. Syndemics and public health: Reconceptualizing disease in bio-social context. Med Anthropol Q. 2003;17(4):423441.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milstein, B. An introduction to the syndemics: Implications for health promotion. Syndemics prevention network, centers for disease control and prevention. (2006). Available from: www.google.de/?gws_rd=ssl#q=Milstein+Introduction+to+syndemicsGoogle Scholar
Tsai, AC. Syndemics: A theory in search of data or data in search of a theory? Soc Sci Med. 2018;206:117122.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mendenhall, E. Syndemic Suffering: Social Distress, Depression, and Diabetes among Mexican Immigrant Women. Routledge, New York; 2012.Google Scholar
Lynch, EB, Fernandez, A, Lighthouse, N, Mendenhall, E, Jacobs, E. Concepts of diabetes self-management in Mexican American and African American low-income patients with diabetes. Health Educ Res. 2012;27(5):814824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mendenhall, E, Seligman, RA, Fernandez, A, Jacobs, EA. Speaking through diabetes: Rethinking the significance of lay discourses on diabetes. Med Anthropol Q. 2010;24(2):220239.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Soepnel, LM, McKinley, MC, Klingberg, S, et al. Evaluation of a text messaging intervention to promote preconception micronutrient supplement use: Feasibility study nested in the healthy life trajectories initiative study in South Africa. JMIR Form Res. 2022;6(8):e37309.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Proctor, DA. Testing the waters: Syndemic gastrointestinal distress in Lambaréné, Gabon, 1926–1932. Soc Sci Med. 2022;295:113405.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Newfield, T. Syndemics and the history of disease: Towards a new engagement. Soc Sci Med. 2022;295:114454.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roseboom, T, de Rooij, S, Painter, R. The Dutch famine and its long-term consequences for adult health. Early Hum Dev. 2006;82(8):485491.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heijmans, BT, Tobi, EW, Stein, AD, et al. Persistent epigenetic differences associated with prenatal exposure to famine in humans. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2008;105(44):1704617049.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Song, S, Wang, W, Hu, P. Famine, death, and madness: Schizophrenia in early adulthood after prenatal exposure to the Chinese Great Leap Forward Famine. Soc Sci Med. 2009;68(7):13151321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
El Hajj, N, Schneider, E, Lehnen, H, Haaf, T. Epigenetics and life-long consequences of an adverse nutritional and diabetic intrauterine environment. Reproduction. 2014;148(6):R111R120.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mendenhall, E. Rethinking Diabetes: Entanglements with Trauma, Poverty, and HIV. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY; 2019.Google Scholar
Manderson, L, Ross, FC. Publics, technologies and interventions in reproduction and early life in South Africa. Humanit Soc Sci Commun. 2020;7(1):40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas-Vail, M. Syndemics theory and its applications to HIV/AIDS public-health interventions. Int J Med Sociol Anthropol. 2016;6(1):001010.Google Scholar
Kalyani, RR, Golden, SH, Cefalu, WT. Diabetes and aging: Unique considerations and goals of care. Diabetes Care. 2017;40(4):440443.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mendenhall, E, Richter, LM, Stein, A, Norris, SA. Psychological and physical co-morbidity among urban South African women. PLoS One. 2013;8(10):e78803.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hardin, J. Faith and the Pursuit of Health: Cardiometabolic Disorders in Samoa. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick; 2019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gálvez, A. Eating NAFTA: Trade, Food Policies, and the Destruction of Mexico. University of California Press, Berkeley; 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yates-Doerr, E. The Weight of Obesity: Hunger and Global Health in Postwar Guatemala. University of California Press, Berkeley; 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moodley, G, Christofides, N, Norris, SA, Achia, T, Hofman, KJ. Obesogenic environments: Access to and advertising of sugar-sweetened beverages in Soweto, South Africa, 2013. Prev Chronic Dis. 2015;12:E186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barnett, K, Mercer, SW, Norbury, M, Watt, G, Wyke, S, Guthrie, B. Epidemiology of multimorbidity and implications for health care, research, and medical education: A cross-sectional study. Lancet. 2012;380(9836):3743.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gluckman, PD, Hanson, MA, Mitchell, MD. Developmental origins of health and disease: Reducing the burden of chronic disease in the next generation. Genome Med. 2010;2(14):13.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cohen, E, Ware, LJ, Prioreschi, A, Draper, C, Bosire, E et al. Material and relational difficulties: The impact of the household environment on the emotional well-being of young Black women living in Soweto, South Africa. J Fam Issues. 2020; 41(8):13071332CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouvette-Turcot, AA, Unternaehrer, E, Gaudreau, H, et al. The joint contribution of maternal history of early adversity and adulthood depression to socioeconomic status and potential relevance for offspring development. J Affect Disord. 2017;207:2631.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bosire, EN, Cele, L, Potelwa, X, Cho, A, Mendenhall, E. God, Church water and spirituality: Perspectives on health and healing in Soweto, South Africa. Glob Public Health. 2022;17(7):11721185.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Norman, RE, Byambaa, M, De, R, Butchart, A, Scott, J, Vos, T. The long-term health consequences of child physical abuse, emotional abuse, and neglect: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS Med. 2012;9(11):e1001349.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miller, GE, Chen, E, Parker, KJ. Psychological stress in childhood and susceptibility to the chronic diseases of aging: Moving toward a model of behavioral and biological mechanisms. Psychol Bull. 2011;137(6):959997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×