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El. knyga: COVID-19 Syndemics and the Global South: A World Divided

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"This book focuses on syndemics in the Global South and uses COVID-19 as a window to understand clusters of disparities and disease comorbidities. The pandemic has exposing and multiplied structural inequalities and certain subpopulations were more exposed to COVID-19 as well as experienced greater morbidity and mortality. The effects of the pandemic differ between countries but have had an especially major impact, although in varying ways, in the Global South. The contributions in this volume explore the differential impacts of COVID-19 at individual, community, national, or regional levels, considering how structural violence is institutionalized in a way that creates vulnerable situations and disproportionate suffering. The book will be of interest toanthropologists and sociologists as well as those working in global and public health"--

This book focuses on syndemics in the Global South and uses COVID-19 as a window to understand clusters of disparities and disease comorbidities.



This book focuses on syndemics in the Global South and uses COVID-19 as a window to understand clusters of disparities and disease comorbidities. The pandemic has exposing and multiplied structural inequalities and certain subpopulations were more exposed to COVID-19 as well as experienced greater morbidity and mortality. The effects of the pandemic differ between countries but have had an especially major impact, although in varying ways, in the Global South. The contributions in this volume explore the differential impacts of COVID-19 at individual, community, national, or regional levels, considering how structural violence is institutionalized in a way that creates vulnerable situations and disproportionate suffering. The book will be of interest to anthropologists and sociologists as well as those working in global and public health.

Introduction
Nicola Bulled, Merrill Singer, and Inayat Ali

1 Sick in the City: COVID-19 and the Syndemics of Urban Life

Merrill Singer and Nicola Bulled

2 Effects Multiplied: Syndemic Interactions among Structured Disparities,
Comorbidities, and COVID-19 in Pakistan

Inayat Ali

3 Deadly Companions: The Diabetes/COVID-19 (DiaCOVID-19) Syndemic in Mexico
and the U.S. Mexican Diaspora

Merrill Singer and Jennifer A. Cook

4 TB-COVID-19 Syndemic in the Philippines: A Double Challenge amidst Public
Health Emergency and Social, Political, and Economic Inequalities

Trisha Denise D. Cedeńo, Kimberly G. Ramos, Mary Grace A. Pelayo, Princess
Rayevy I. Esmillo, and Ian Christopher N. Rocha

5 Active in the Community and Underlying Health Conditions: Exploring
Constructions of Blame, Responsibility, and Othering associated with
Australias COVID-19 Syndemic

Kate Senior and Richard Chenhall

6 Understanding the COVID-19 Syndemic in South Africa: Concrete Responses and
a Call to Action

Peter van Heusden, Kezia Lewins, Louis Reynolds, and Laurel Baldwin-Ragaven

7 COVID-19 Syndemics in Three Distinct South African Communities and the
Impact on Shared Loss and Grieving

Lorena Nunez Carrasco, Gracsious Maviza, Vuyokazi Moyo, and Storm Theunissen

8 The Iatrogenic Syndemic of COVID-19/Diabetes Mellitus/Black Fungus in
India: Evidence of the Shortcomings of Neoliberal Healthcare Policies

Nicola Bulled

9 COVID-19 lockdown and Shadow Pandemic of Gender-Based Violence in
Nigeria

Chiemezie S. Atama and Obinna J. Eze

10 Ecosyndemics, COVID-19, and Child Health in the Anthropocene

Merrill Singer

Conclusion: COVID Syndemics in the Global South

Merrill Singer, Nicola Bulled, and Inayat Ali
Inayat Ali leads the Department of Public Health and Allied Sciences at Fatima Jinnah Women University, and is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at FJWU, Pakistan. He is also Research Fellow in the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Vienna, Austria.

Merrill Singer is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at the University of Connecticut, USA.

Nicola Bulled is Assistant Research Professor at the Institute for Collaboration on Health, Intervention, and Policy (InCHIP), University of Connecticut, USA.