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Can social adversity and mental, physical and oral multimorbidity form a syndemic? A concept and protocol paper

  • Easter Joury
  • , Eliana Nakhleh
  • , Ed Beveridge
  • , Derek Tracy
  • , Ellie Heidari
  • , David Shiers
  • , Silke Vereeken
  • , Emily Peckham
  • , Simon Gilbody
  • , Jayati Das-Munshi
  • , Farida Fortune
  • , Vishal R. Aggarwal
  • , Masuma Mishu
  • , Joseph Firth
  • , Kamaldeep Bhui
  • Queen Mary University of London
  • Barts Health NHS Trust
  • University of Cambridge
  • UCLPartners
  • National Health Service
  • Brunel University London
  • King's College London
  • Imperial College London
  • Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
  • Greater Manchester West Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust
  • University of Manchester
  • Keele University
  • University of York
  • Bangor University
  • University of Leeds
  • University College London
  • Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust
  • University of Oxford
  • World Psychiatric Association (WPA) Collaborating Centre Oxford

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Clustering mental, physical and oral conditions reduce drastically the life expectancy. These conditions are precipitated and perpetuated by adverse social, economic, environmental, political and healthcare contextual factors, and sustained through bidirectional interactions forming potentially a 'syndemic'. No previous study has investigated such potential syndemic. Thus, the present project aimed to (i) test for syndemic interactions between social adversity (socioeconomic adversity and traumatic events) and mental, physical and oral multimorbidity using the syndemic theoretical framework; and (ii) determine whether the syndemic relationships vary by age, sex and ethnicity. Methods: Data from three large-scale population-based databases: UK BioBank, US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) and the Research with East London Adolescents Community Health Survey (RELACHS) will be analysed. Structural equation modelling (SEM) will be utilised to conceptualise syndemic factors and model complex relationships between directly observed and indirectly observed (latent) variables (syndemic constructs). Discussion: the syndemic conceptualisation provides a valuable framework to understand health and illness, and hence to better design and deliver effective and cost-effective preventative and curative integrated (syndemic) care to improve patient and population health. Such syndemic care aims to address the social determinants of health, whilst simultaneously managing all interlocked conditions.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1426054
JournalFrontiers in Psychiatry
Volume15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 Joury, Nakhleh, Beveridge, Tracy, Heidari, Shiers, Vereeken, Peckham, Gilbody, Das-Munshi, Fortune, Aggarwal, Mishu, Firth and Bhui.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities
    SDG 10 Reduced Inequalities

Keywords

  • conceptualisation
  • dental diseases
  • health equity
  • integrated care
  • mental disorders
  • methodology
  • physical conditions
  • syndemics

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