Literature DB >> 30296952

EXPERIENCING SYNDEMIC: DISENTANGLING THE BIOSOCIAL COMPLEXITY OF TUBERCULOSIS THROUGH QUALITATIVE RESEARCH.

Olga Zvonareva1, Willemien van Bergen1, Nadezhda Kabanets2, Aleksander Alliluyev2, Olga Filinyuk2.   

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major global public health problem that has become a crisis fuelled by HIV and the increasing occurrence of antimicrobial resistance. What has been termed the biosocial nature of TB challenges effective control of the disease. Yet, biosocial interactions involved in the persistence of TB in diverse settings are difficult to systematically account for. The recently developed framework of syndemics provides a way to capture how complex health problems result from the interactions between diseases such as HIV and TB, and harmful social conditions such as unemployment, malnutrition and substance abuse. This article advances the syndemics scholarship by examining health conditions that cluster together with TB in the Russian Federation, by eliciting a set of social processes that precipitate this clustering and exacerbate health outcomes, and by analysing interactions between these health conditions and social processes. To provide an account of this complexity, the article takes a qualitative approach and draws on the perspectives and experiences of people with TB. The results demonstrate emergence of a syndemic of stress, substance abuse, TB and HIV that is sustained by poverty, occupational insecurity, marginalization and isolation. Frictions between the narrow focus of the health care system on TB and the wider syndemic processes in which the lives of many persons with TB are embedded, contribute to poorer health outcomes and increase the risks of developing drug resistance. Finally, the article argues that the large-scale and impersonal forces become embodied as individual pathology through the crucial interface of the ways in which persons experience and make sense of these forces and pathologies. Qualitative research is needed for the adequate analysis of this biosocial complexity in order to provide a solid basis for responses to TB-centred syndemics in various settings.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Qualitative research; Syndemic; Tuberculosis

Year:  2018        PMID: 30296952     DOI: 10.1017/S0021932018000263

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biosoc Sci        ISSN: 0021-9320


  2 in total

1.  Living with tuberculosis: a qualitative study of patients' experiences with disease and treatment.

Authors:  Juliet Addo; Dave Pearce; Marilyn Metcalf; Courtney Lundquist; Gillian Thomas; David Barros-Aguirre; Gavin C K W Koh; Mike Strange
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2022-09-10       Impact factor: 4.135

2.  The need for protecting and enhancing TB health policies and services for forcibly displaced and migrant populations during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Michael Knipper; Ana Cristina Sedas; Salmaan Keshavjee; Aula Abbara; Naser Almhawish; Hani Alashawi; Leonid Lecca; Michael Wilson; Almuddin Zumla; Ibrahim Abubakar; Miriam Orcutt
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2021-03-26       Impact factor: 3.623

  2 in total

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