Harvard Medical School and The Massachusetts General Hospital, United States; Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda.
Soc Sci Med. 2018 Jun;206:117-122. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.03.040. Epub 2018 Mar 30.
The concept of a syndemic was proposed more than two decades ago to explain how large-scale social forces might give rise to co-occurring epidemics that synergistically interact to undermine health in vulnerable populations. This conceptual instrument has the potential to help policymakers and program implementers in their endeavors to improve population health. Accordingly, it has become an increasingly popular heuristic for advocacy, most notably in the field of HIV treatment and prevention. However, most empirical studies purporting to validate the theory of syndemics actually do no such thing. Tomori et al. (2018) provide a novel case study from India illustrating how the dominant empirical approach fails to promote deeper understanding about how hazardous alcohol use, illicit drug use, depression, childhood sexual abuse, and intimate partner violence interact to worsen HIV risk among men who have sex with men. In this commentary, I relate the theory of syndemics to other established social science and public health theories of disease distribution, identify possible sources of conceptual and empirical confusion, and provide concrete suggestions for how to validate the theory using a mixed-methods approach. The hope is that more evidence can be mobilized -- whether informed by the theory of syndemics or not -- to improve health and psychosocial wellbeing among vulnerable populations worldwide.
二十多年前,人们提出了综合征的概念,以解释大规模的社会力量如何引发同时发生的流行病,这些流行病协同作用,破坏弱势人群的健康。这一概念工具有可能帮助政策制定者和方案执行者努力改善人口健康。因此,它已成为一种越来越流行的启发式方法,特别是在艾滋病毒治疗和预防领域。然而,大多数声称验证综合征理论的实证研究实际上并没有做到这一点。Tomori 等人(2018 年)提供了一个来自印度的新案例研究,说明了占主导地位的实证方法如何未能促进更深入地了解危险饮酒、非法药物使用、抑郁、儿童性虐待和亲密伴侣暴力如何相互作用,从而增加男男性行为者感染艾滋病毒的风险。在这篇评论中,我将综合征理论与其他已确立的社会科学和公共卫生疾病分布理论联系起来,确定了概念和经验混淆的可能来源,并提供了使用混合方法验证该理论的具体建议。希望能够动员更多的证据——无论是否受综合征理论的影响——以改善全世界弱势人群的健康和心理社会福利。