Singer Merrill, Clair Scott
Institute for Social and Behavioral Research, Iowa State University, USA.
Med Anthropol Q. 2003 Dec;17(4):423-41. doi: 10.1525/maq.2003.17.4.423.
The world of public health has undergone dramatic changes since the emergence of AIDS in the early 1980s. The appearance and global spread in recent years of wave after wave of new and renewed infectious diseases and their entwinement with each other and with the social conditions and biopsychological consequences of disparity, discrimination, and structural violence has produced a new significant threat to public health internationally. The term syndemic has been introduced recently by medical anthropologists to label the synergistic interaction of two or more coexistent diseases and resultant excess burden of disease. This article provides the fullest examination of this new concept to date, including a review of relevant new literature and recent research finds concerning coinfection and synergistic interaction of diseases and social conditions at the biological and population levels.
自20世纪80年代初艾滋病出现以来,公共卫生领域发生了巨大变化。近年来,一波又一波新的和复发的传染病不断出现并在全球传播,它们相互交织,与社会状况以及不平等、歧视和结构性暴力所带来的生物心理后果相互关联,对全球公共卫生构成了新的重大威胁。医学人类学家最近引入了“综合征”这一术语,用以指代两种或更多并存疾病的协同相互作用以及由此产生的额外疾病负担。本文对这一新概念进行了迄今为止最为全面的审视,包括对相关新文献的综述以及近期有关疾病共感染、疾病与社会状况在生物学和人群层面的协同相互作用的研究发现。