Brain Syndemics: Cognitive Deficit, Pathways of Interaction, and the Biology of Inequality

M. Singer
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Children born into and raised in disadvantaged families tend to experience poorer health and more developmental delays, lower achievement, and a greater number of behavioural and emotional problems than children from wealthier homes. There is growing evidence that poverty and social inequality leave their imprint on brain structure as well. The brain exhibits considerable plasticity, one expression of which is shaped by the biology of inequality. A specific consequence is cognitive deficit found among children raised in poverty and subject to social discrimination. This paper argues that several pathways impacted by poverty, including chronic stress, malnutrition, exposure to heightened levels of air pollution, and other toxin exposures, syndemically link social inequality to underlying neural mechanisms and to suboptimal brain development and structure. These deficits need not be permanent and are reversible through urgently needed structural, socio-economic intervention.
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脑综合症:认知缺陷,相互作用的途径,和不平等的生物学
与富裕家庭的儿童相比,在贫困家庭出生和长大的儿童往往健康状况较差,发育迟缓,成绩较低,行为和情感问题较多。越来越多的证据表明,贫困和社会不平等也会在大脑结构上留下印记。大脑表现出相当大的可塑性,其中一种表现是由不平等的生物学形成的。一个具体的后果是,在贫困中长大并受到社会歧视的儿童中发现认知缺陷。本文认为,受贫困影响的几种途径,包括慢性压力、营养不良、暴露于高水平的空气污染和其他毒素暴露,将社会不平等与潜在的神经机制以及次优的大脑发育和结构综合起来。这些赤字不一定是永久性的,可以通过迫切需要的结构性、社会经济干预来逆转。
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