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Definition Social Epidemiology has been defined as the branch of epidemiology that studies the social distribution and social determinants of health (Berkman and Kawachi 2000). In this broad sense, all epidemiology is social epidemiology (Kaufman and Cooper 1999) with perhaps the latter discipline making explicit the analysis of the social determinants of Health . Social epidemiology builds and expands by posing new research questions, utilising new research methods and influencing government policy agenda. History: In 1674 john Graunut set out to understand who was dying during outbreaks 1863 Loius rene villerme recognise elevated level of illness that appeared work related , thus identifying social class & work condition as the crucial determinants of of health & diseases. 1800 physician & other argued that bad air & emanation from decaying matter cause outbreak of cholera , observing that death were commonly clustered among poor 1830 john snow ,who methodically covered the street of London collecting statistics documenting the location of outbreak. Snow identified that contaminated water from communal pumps s the source of cholera. 1844 Freidrich engels a german social scientist further described the working condition of factory worker in England , Engles witnessed the horrible working condition & identified the relationship between these condition & disease. 1860 Germ theory identifies single causal agent such as salmonella typhi as the cause of disease. By the 1950 -60 chronic disease were more frequent particularly in developed country where infectious diseases are controlled , now clinician & epidemiologist monitoring these condition to understand the chronic disease caused by combination of biological social behaviour patterns. This new branch of epidemiology focussed on the health impact of social condition & social status as the key determinants of morbidity & mortality emerged in the 1960 -70. By the end of 20th century the concept of social causation of disease gained traction The range of problems studied by social epidemiologists includes such questions as whether neighbourhood contexts can affect health, or workplace organization, or income inequality and social cohesion . Goal of social epidemiology is to conceptualize, operationalize and test the associations between aspects of the social environment (families, workplaces, residential neighbourhoods, the political economy) and population health. Various factor at different levels that interact to influence health status Various factor at different levels that interact to influence health status Structural social individual Legal structure Social capital Individual characteristics Laws , law enforcement Trust , norms Age Policy environment Community sex Economic policy Access to health care , race Health & education policy community group school & disability Agriculture ,transportation work place instiution psychosocial Demographic changes Cultural context biolgy Urbanisation , Belief , pattern of behaviour heredity migration.aging Tradition Behavior Institution Social network Hygine Government legislative Social influence engagement Sexual activity &judicial system a Diet & exercise Access to resources Care practices Support Socioeconomic position Physical environment Income Weather natural resources Education hazzards occupation Theories of social epidemiology in the 21st century ecosocial prospective In social epidemiology the three main theoretical framework for explaining disease distribution are (1) psychosocial (2) social production of disesase/political economy of health (3) ecosocial & other emerging multi level frameworks. A psychosocial framework direct attention to endogenous biological response to human interaction. a social production of disease / political economy of health framework explicitly address economic & political determinants of health & disease but leave biology opaqae; ecosocial & other emerging multi level frameworks seek to integrate social biological reasoning & a dynamic, historical & ecological prospective to develop new insight into determinants of population distribution of disease & social ineqilities in health. To gain clarity on causes & barrier to reducing social ineqilities in health , social epidemiologist will need to generate improved theoretical framework & necessary data to test & refine them Commission on social determinant of health : closing the gap in generation The commissioner overreaching recommendation: 1. Improve daily living condition- the circumstances in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age 2. Tackle the inequitable distribution of power money & resources : the structural drivers of the conditions of daily life globally, nationally, and locally 3. Measure the problem, evaluate action, expand the knowledge base, develop a workforce that is trained in the social determinants of health, and raise public awareness about the social determinants of health 1. Improve daily living condition Improve the well-being of girls and women and the circumstances in which their children are born, put majoremphasis on early child development and education for girls and boys, improve living and working conditions and create social protection policy supportive of all, and create conditions for a flourishing older life. Policies to achieve these goals will involve civil society, governments, and global institutions 1.1 Equity from start What must be done Commit & implement a comprehensive approach to early life building on existing child survival programms & extending intervention in early life to include social emotional & language /cognitive development Expand the provision & scope of education to nclude the principl of early child development (physical social emotional & language. 1.2 Healthy places healthy people What must be done Place health & health equity at the heart of urban governance & planning Promote health equity between rural & urban areas through sustained investment in rural development Ensure that economic & social policy responses to climate change & other environmental degradation take into account health equity. 1.3 Fair employment decent work What must be done Make full & fair employment & decent work a central goal of national & international social & economic policy. Achieving health equity requires safe ,secure & fairly paid work year round work opportunities & healthy work balance for all Improve the working condition for all worker to reduce their exposure to material hazard , work related stress & health damaging behaviour 1.4 Social protection across life course What must be done Establish & strengthen universal comprehensive social protection policies that supports a level of Income sufficient for healthy living. Ensure social protection to those normally excluded . 1.5 Universal health care What must be done Build health care system based on principles of equity , disease prevention & health promotion Ensure that health care system financing is equitable . Build & strengthen the health workforce & expand capabilities to act on the social determinant of health 2. Tackle the inequitable distribution of power money & resources the structural drivers of the conditions of daily life globally, nationally, and locally In order to address health inequities, and inequitable conditions of daily living, it is necessary to address inequities – such as those between men and women – in the way society is organized. This requires a strong public sector that is committed, capable, and adequately financed. To achieve that requires more than strengthened government – it requires strengthened governance: legitimacy, space, and support for civil society, for an accountable private sector, and for people across society to agree public interests and reinvest in the value of collective action. In a globalized world, the need for governance dedicated to equity applies equally from the community level to global institutions 2.1 Health equity in all policy system programmes What must be done? Place responsibility for action on health & health equity at the highest level of goverance & ensure its coherent consideration across all policies Adopt a social determinant framework across the policy & programmatic function of the ministry of health & strengthen in stewardship role in supporting a social determinants approach across government 2.2 Fair financing What must be done Strengthen public finance for action on the social determinants of health Increase international finance for heath equity & coordinate increased finance through social determinants of health action framework. Fairly allocate government resources for action on the social determinant of health. 2.3 Gender equity What must be done Address gender biases in the structures of society –in laws & their inforcement in the way organisation are run & intervention designed . Develop finance policies & programme that closes gaps in education & skills & that support female economic participation . Increase investment in sexual & reproductive health services & programme building to universal coverage & right . 2.4 Political empowerment- inclusion of voice What must be done Empower all group of society through fair representation in decision making & how society operates particularly in relation to its effect on health equity . Enable civil society to organise & act in a mathat promotes & realize the political & social right affectin g health equity . 2.5 Good global governance What must be done Make health equity global development goal & adopt a social determinant of health framework to strengthen multilateral action for development . Strengthen WHO leadership in global action on the social determinant of health institutionalizing social determinants of health as a guideline principle across WHO department Measure and Understand the Problem and Assess the Impact of Action Acknowledging that there is a problem, and ensuring that health inequity is measured – within countries and globally – is a vital platform for action. National governments and international organizations, supported by WHO, should set up national and global health equity surveillance systems for routine monitoring of health inequity and the social determinants of health and should evaluate the health equity impact of policy and action. Creating the organizational space and capacity to act effectively on health inequity requires investment in training of policy-makers and health practitioners and public understanding of social determinants of health. It also requires a stronger focus on social determinants in public health research 3.1 The Social Determinants of Health: Monitoring, Research, and Training Ensure that routine monitoring systems for health equity and the social determinants of health are in place, locally, nationally, and internationally. Invest in generating and sharing new evidence on the ways in which social determinants influence population health and health equity and on the effectiveness of measures to reduce health inequities through action on social determinants. Provide training on the social determinants of health to policy actors, stakeholders, and practitioners and invest in raising public awareness . How society affect health: area of research The social determinants of health: Health behaviours Material, economic and political determinants of health: Life course Social biology General susceptibility of disease Social support Social disorganisation Work stress Depression & affective disorder The social determinants of health: People from better social environments with greater access to socio-economic resources are likely to have better health. Supporting this view, social inequalities in health have been documented for most countries. The influences of the social structure operate via three main pathways- material factors, work and the social environment Health behaviours People from lower socio-economic groups are more likely to smoke, drink alcohol excessively, have less physical exercise and unhealthier diets. It is likely that such unhealthy behaviours form part of the pathways underlying social inequalities in health. Material, economic and political determinants of health: Chadwick (Flinn 1965) wrote about how overcrowding, damp and filthy living conditions contributed to the lower life expectancy of working class men. In 1848, partly through fear of cholera and partly through pressure from Chadwick, the British parliament passed the first Public Health Act. This, in addition to the pioneering work of the epidemiologist John Snow (Snow 1855), set in motion the public health movement in 19th century Britain which saw improvements in housing, sewage and drainage, water supply and contagious diseases and provided Britain with the most extensive public health system in the world . Life course : The study of long term effects of physical and social exposures during gestation, childhood, adolescence, young adulthood and later adult life on the risk of chronic disease has been defined as a life course approach to chronic disease epidemiology (Ben-Shlomo and Kuh 2002). The first is a latency model of early life experiences which hypothesises that experiences in utero and early life affect cardiovascular disease in adulthood (Barker 1991, Barker 1997). Barker found evidence that birthweight and other indicators of fetal growth in the newborn are related to fibrinogen and insulin resistance fifty years later. He also found that birthweight is related to functioning of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Low birthweight is associated with poorer childhood health which some researchers have linked to lower social position in adulthood (Illsley 1986). This evidence suggests that a short term exposure in utero can have a long latency period with adverse health and social consequences in adulthood. Social biology : Psychosocial factors may affect health in two distinct ways- they may directly cause biological changes which predispose to disease, or they may, indirectly, influence behaviours such as smoking and diet, which in turn affects health (Brunner 2000). General susceptibility to disease: research from social biology shows that some stressful experiences activate multiple hormones, affecting multiple systems and potentially producing wide-ranging organ damage. The cumulative experience of stress may affect a variety of chronic and infectious diseases through neuroendocrine-mediated biological pathways. Social support : Durkheim investigated the links between social integration and suicide. He explained suicide in terms of social dynamics, arguing that suicide is not an isolated individual tragedy but a reflection of social conditions such as the lack of attachment and regulation in society . Bowlby (Bowlby 1969) who argued that marriage is the adult equivalent of childhood attachment between mother and child. Secure attachment, whether interms of parent-child or marital relationships, provides for successful and healthydevelopment. Men who have never married or have recently divorced have a significantly greater risk of dying from both cardiovascular and non-cardiovasculardiseases than married men (Ebrahim et al 1995) Social disorganisation: Social scientists have puzzled over why some societies seem to prosper, possess effective political institutions and have better health outcomes compared to other societies. A cohesive society has greater amounts of social capital (higher levels of interpersonal trust, reciprocity and mutual aid) than a disorganised society. Work stress: There are two dominant models of work stress . The first, the job strain model is based on the concepts of job control and demands (Karasek et al 1981). Workers with low levels of job control and high levels of demand are said to have high levels of job strain (or work stress). Job control (or decision latitude) consists of whether or not workers are able to utilise and develop skills (skill discretion) and their authority over decisions. Job demands consist of qualitative emotional demands as well as quantitative demands specifying output per unit of time. Prolonged and repeated exposure to job strain is hypothesised to increase sympathadrenal arousal anddecrease the body’s ability to restore and repair tissues which in turn affects health. Depression and affective states: Another set of psychological pathways by which social conditions may affect health is through emotions and the physiological, cognitive and behavioural responses they evoke.. Emotions can be considered as products of stress as well as mediators of its effects thus representing acrucial link in the chain of causation from social stressors to individual biological responses . Research Method in social epidemiology 1. Applying a population perspective Applying the population perspective into epidemiological research means asking “why does this population have this particular distribution of risk factors”, in addition to asking “why did a particular individual get sick? 2. Better measures of exposures In attempting to understand the social determinants of health, research into social epidemiology has pioneered the use of better measures of the social structure. 3. Better measure of health : Research in social epidemiology does not just focus on clinically measured disease outcomes because the absence of disease is not sufficient for health. Rather, one of the main focuses of social epidemiological research is the use of health related quality of life measures as valid measures of health outcomes 4. Better measures of the association between the social Structure and health : As different measures of the social structure may have different pathways to different health outcomes, the reduction of such differences into a single regression model may obscure rather than elucidate the pathways underlying the social determinants of health. 5. Analysing population surveys, birth cohorts : One of the defining characteristics of research methods in social epidemiology is the use of population representative sample surveys in analysing the social determinants of health. Research in social epidemiology tends to use non-experimental observational studies, both cross sectional and longitudinal. References: 1. Chanola Tarani, Marmot Micheal :social epidemiology , Dept of Epidemiology & public health , University college London 2. Kriger Nancy International journal of epidemiology 2001:30: 668-667 3. Commission on social determinant of health 2008: final Report World Health Organisation 4. Candace Miller , Chapter 2 , social epidemiology Jones & Bartlett Publisher 5. Equity Social Determinant & Public Health Programme: World Health Organisation 2010 6. Eric Blas , Social Determinants Approach to Public Health , from concept to practice