Understanding the impact of exposure to adverse socioeconomic conditions on chronic stress from a complexity science perspective
Autor: | Mary Nicolaou, Rick Quax, Karien Stronks, Alexia Sawyer, Loes Crielaard |
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Přispěvatelé: | Graduate School, Public and occupational health, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, APH - Methodology, Computational Science Lab (IVI, FNWI) |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
business.industry
Perspective (graphical) Stressor Context (language use) Learned helplessness Cognition General Medicine Affect (psychology) Feedback loops Causal loop diagram Developmental psychology Socioeconomic Factors Chronic Disease Socioeconomic status Medicine Life course approach Humans Chronic stress business Child Stress Psychological Research Article |
Zdroj: | BMC medicine, 19(1):242. BioMed Central BMC Medicine BMC Medicine, 19:242. BioMed Central BMC Medicine, Vol 19, Iss 1, Pp 1-20 (2021) |
ISSN: | 1741-7015 |
Popis: | Background Chronic stress increases chronic disease risk and may underlie the association between exposure to adverse socioeconomic conditions and adverse health outcomes. The relationship between exposure to such conditions and chronic stress is complex due to feedback loops between stressor exposure and psychological processes, encompassing different temporal (acute stress response to repeated exposure over the life course) and spatial (biological/psychological/social) scales. We examined the mechanisms underlying the relationship between exposure to adverse socioeconomic conditions and chronic stress from a complexity science perspective, focusing on amplifying feedback loops across different scales. Methods We developed a causal loop diagram (CLD) to interpret available evidence from this perspective. The CLD was drafted by an interdisciplinary group of researchers. Evidence from literature was used to confirm/contest the variables and causal links included in the conceptual framework and refine their conceptualisation. Our findings were evaluated by eight independent researchers. Results Adverse socioeconomic conditions imply an accumulation of stressors and increase the likelihood of exposure to uncontrollable childhood and life course stressors. Repetition of such stressors may activate mechanisms that can affect coping resources and coping strategies and stimulate appraisal of subsequent stressors as uncontrollable. We identified five feedback loops describing these mechanisms: (1) progressive deterioration of access to coping resources because of repeated insolvability of stressors; (2) perception of stressors as uncontrollable due to learned helplessness; (3) tax on cognitive bandwidth caused by stress; (4) stimulation of problem avoidance to provide relief from the stress response and free up cognitive bandwidth; and (5) susceptibility to appraising stimuli as stressors against a background of stress. Conclusions Taking a complexity science perspective reveals that exposure to adverse socioeconomic conditions implies recurrent stressor exposure which impacts chronic stress via amplifying feedback loops that together could be conceptualised as one vicious cycle. This means that in order for individual-level psychological interventions to be effective, the context of exposure to adverse socioeconomic conditions also needs to be addressed. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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