The Muslim Gaze and the COVID-19 Syndemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Epidemiology and Clinical Features of COVID
3. Syndemic Theory
- Large-scale political-economic forces, accumulate over generations, result in deep-seated social, economic and power inequities grounded in Islamophobia as a fundamental driver of disparities at multiple levels
- Disease concentration: co-occurrence of multiple social and spatial epidemic clusters as a result of inequities shaping distribution of risks and resources for health
- Disease interaction: overlapping epidemics exacerbate the health effects of adverse social conditions, either through biological interactions between disease states or through interactions between biological and social processes
- Intersectionality: overlapping epidemics have differential impact on subgroups that embody unique and multiple axes of discrimination and disadvantage simultaneously along lines of protected characteristics that interact with structural and social forces
- Mutual enhancement and causation: epidemics do not merely co-occur, the synergy and reinforcement between them increases overall burden on communities, contributes to further disparities and creates new epidemics
4. The Muslim Gaze and Islamophobia
5. The Perfect Biosocial Storm
5.1. Structural Epidemics
5.1.1. Historical Mistrust
5.1.2. Media Stereotypes
5.1.3. Immigration Policies
5.1.4. Security Policies
5.1.5. Poverty
5.1.6. Neighbourhood Characteristics and Residential Segregation
5.2. Psychosocial Epidemics
5.2.1. Living Conditions
5.2.2. Employment and Financial Hardship
5.2.3. Workplace Discrimination
5.2.4. Trauma-Based Barriers to Healthcare
5.2.5. Health Literacy
5.2.6. Disruption of Communal Cultural Practices
5.2.7. Adverse Mental Health Impacts
5.3. Biological Epidemics
5.3.1. Chronic Disease Burden and Nutritiona Deficiencies
5.3.2. Epigenetic Modulation
5.3.3. Intersectionality and Multiply Marginalised Groups
6. Disease Interactions
- (a)
- Stress and trauma that alter key regulatory physiological systems (Ong et al. 2017): cardiovascular, neuroendocrine and immune function which can lead to acute inflammation and elevated stress hormone levels such as adrenaline and cortisol, elevated inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein, raise blood pressure and cardiovascular risk, suppress or hyperactivate the immune system, stimulate the expression of several pro-inflammatory cytokine, increase oxidative stress and generate a systemic inflammatory response. These pro-inflammatory cytokines overlap with the components of the cytokine storm, and thus may amplify the cytokine storm produced by SARS-nCoV-2 associated with severe disease.
- (b)
- Allostatic load and biological weathering: chronic inflammation and physiological activation weather the body, contributing to the development of long-term conditions such as hypertension, obesity, diabetes and malignancy. All of these are known risk factors for severe COVID-19 and raise the possibility of interaction between allostatic load and biological weathering and disease states that increase risks from COVID-19.
- (c)
- Appraisal and affective reactions that evoke changes in the function of organs in key physiological systems such as dilatation of blood vessels, modulation of the neuroendocrine and immune system resulting in the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and changes in cardiac, hepatobiliary and mental function (Liu et al. 2017). These processes overlap with the cytokine storm seen with COVID-19 and may also amplify multi-organ damage observed with severe COVID-19. Negative appraisal and affective responses and chronic inflammation can also alter neural circuitry and increase social stereotypes that negatively impact mental health and generate a vicious cycle (Eisenberger et al. 2017).
- (d)
- Stress/discrimination and epigenetics: research on epigenetics has shown that differences in host tissue and subgroup patterns of SARS-nCoV-2 infection may be driven by DNA methylation modifications (Chlamydas et al. 2021). A similar process of DNA methylation modification can occur as a response to stress-induced epigenetic processes seen in socially marginalised groups, as described previously, which could potentially alter susceptibility to COVID-19 infection.
7. Worsening Inequities and New Epidemics
8. Implication for UK Policy, Practice and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Shahid, H.J.; Dogra, S.A. The Muslim Gaze and the COVID-19 Syndemic. Religions 2022, 13, 780. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090780
Shahid HJ, Dogra SA. The Muslim Gaze and the COVID-19 Syndemic. Religions. 2022; 13(9):780. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090780
Chicago/Turabian StyleShahid, Hina Javaid, and Sufyan Abid Dogra. 2022. "The Muslim Gaze and the COVID-19 Syndemic" Religions 13, no. 9: 780. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090780
APA StyleShahid, H. J., & Dogra, S. A. (2022). The Muslim Gaze and the COVID-19 Syndemic. Religions, 13(9), 780. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13090780