The overall aim of this dissertation was to study the contribution of a syndemics framework to understanding and addressing persistent health disparities. Departing from an interdisciplinary... Show moreThe overall aim of this dissertation was to study the contribution of a syndemics framework to understanding and addressing persistent health disparities. Departing from an interdisciplinary approach, the dissertation attends to research questions on syndemics indicators, contextual drivers for syndemics, the intergenerational nature of syndemics, and possibilities for early public health interventions in Katwijk, a former fishing town in the Netherlands. An epidemiological study described the three most prevalent disease clusters in Katwijk. A qualitative life course study found a first indication that syndemic vulnerability is potentially intergenerational, and that syndemic processes can be countered. A mixed method study showed that while challenging, a family-engagement approach can elicit positive effects on families’ health and wellbeing. The ethnographic study described the hurdles for implementing family-focused health promotion for multifaceted health conditions, such as childhood obesity. This dissertation establishes that the syndemics framework provides tools to identify past and present factors on the complex pathways to persistent poor health, which in turn point at directions for breaking patterns of generational health. The findings highlight a need for multisystem approaches in which stakeholders develop a thorough understanding of a community’s history and past legacies with institutions, and professionals are equipped with the necessary knowledge, attitudes and skills for community-based and family-focused interventions. Show less
This qualitative case study uses a life-course approach to explore syndemic vulnerability in a former fishing village in the Netherlands. Building on four years of fieldwork in a low-income... Show moreThis qualitative case study uses a life-course approach to explore syndemic vulnerability in a former fishing village in the Netherlands. Building on four years of fieldwork in a low-income neighborhood, we explored salient themes between and across families and generations. Elderly community members (> 65 years) were interviewed to map village history and explore how contextual factors have affected family life, health, and wellbeing since the 1940s. We systematically traced and compared processes leading to or from syndemic vulnerability by studying seven families across three generations. Adults with at least one of clustering diseases, their parents (when possible), and their children participated in semi-structured life-course interviews. A complex interaction of endemic social conditions, sociocultural normative processes, learned health be-haviors, and disheartening life events shaped families' predispositions for a syndemic of psychological distress, cardiometabolic conditions, and musculoskeletal pain. Educational attainment, continued social support, and aspirational capabilities emerged as themes related to decreasing syndemic vulnerability. This study demonstrates that syndemic vulnerability is potentially intergenerational and reveals the need for culturally sensitive and family-focused syndemic interventions. Future longitudinal research should focus on unravelling the pathogenesis of the clustering of psychological distress, cardiometabolic conditions, and musculoskeletal pain among young people. Show less