| Literature DB >> 23908834 |
Elliot M Berry1, Sabina De Geest.
Abstract
The term sociotype has been introduced to describe the dynamic relationship of an individual with his/her social environment throughout life. The sociotype is a conceptual framework to highlight, in addition to bio-medical pathways, the psycho-social and environmental factors necessary to understand responses to life stresses and patient self-management for chronic illness. The sociotype interacts with genotype expression through mate selection and metabolic programming, and with the phenotype to determine adaptation throughout life from birth to old age. Following on the work of Antonovsky, Engel, and McEwen, and others in the life and social sciences, the sociotype details and expands the many factors generally included in the environmental influences on a person's life identified here as the domains of health, relationships, and environment. Physiological mediators for sociotypic influences include: adrenal steroids and the sympathetic nervous system (allostatic load), and oxytocin (social neuroscience). The biological pathways are multiple through nutrition (essential dietary-derived amino- and fatty acids for neurotransmitter synthesis, caloric restriction, and diet-gene interactions), epigenesis, and metabolic programming. Nutrition influences growth and development, fertility and longevity, and also determines susceptibility to non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease and cancer, and particularly diabetes and obesity, through in-utero effects, the development of intestinal flora (microbiome), and chronic stress. Thus the sociotype and nutrition are reciprocally related in both health and disease.Entities:
Keywords: Coping; diabetes; environment; genotype; obesity; phenotype; relationships; sociotype
Year: 2012 PMID: 23908834 PMCID: PMC3678814 DOI: 10.5041/RMMJ.10077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rambam Maimonides Med J ISSN: 2076-9172
Figure 1The relationship of the sociotype to genotypic expression and the phenotype throughout the life cycle.
The three domains of sociotypic inputs throughout the life trajectory.
Classification of some of the factors that are involved in dealing with different life situations. This Table should be read horizontally: some factors may operate and change at more than one life-time stage.
| Timeline | Individual Health | Relationships with... | Environment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nutrition | Type of family (one or two parents, same sex) | Geographic demography | |
| Infancy and Childhood | Breast-feeding | Parents (including their relationship) | Education, stimulation |
| Adolescence | Rites of passage | School friends, peer group | Higher education |
| Adulthood | Personality type | Spouse (mate selection) and in-laws | Employment, occupation, career trajectory |
| Middle Age | Coping strategies through life events, including: Marriage, birth, infertility, divorce, menopause, retirement, disease, bereavement, misfortune, bankruptcy | Care of parents | Political system and ideology |
| Old Age | Physiological, psychological, and cognitive decline | Family | Housing, sheltered living, institution |
Figure 2The effects of nutrition on the sociotype during the life cycle.
*Factors involved in the pathogenesis of diabesity as discussed in the text.
Additional factors in the three domains of the sociotype that relate specifically to chronic disease management as in diabesity.
| Macro-level: Health care system, health benefits | Significant other and family | Access to health centers, mobility |
| Meso-level: Health insurance, relations with health maintenance organization (HMO), pharmacists | Community primary care case manager and medical team | Facilities for chronic care: clinics, dialysis centers, day-care |
| Micro-level: Patient care process, health literacy, treatment, and side-effects: adapting, adjusting to a new reality | Case manager | Financial circumstances |
| Physical status, nutrition, activity, self-management | Continuity and coordination of care | Housing facilities (daily living) |
| Mental health, personality type, health beliefs, taking responsibility for treatment options | Patient self-management support groups | Ability to continue working |
| Coping and compliance strategies, denial | Friends | Cultural acceptability of illness |
| Health literacy | Information technology |