George Monbiot calls it one of the most dramatic medical
advances in decades. It will save countless lives. It will improve treatment outcomes radically. It will reduce hospital
stays. And yet, it is not a new drug. It is not a new surgical procedure. The
dramatic advance is a community effort to provide the sick with stronger social
connections.
In a town called Frome in the British county of Somerset,
local citizens decided to provide community support to the ill. The results
were dramatic:
While
across the whole of Somerset emergency hospital admissions rose by 29% during
the three years of the study, in Frome they fell by 17%. Julian Abel, a
consultant physician in palliative care and lead author of the draft paper,
remarks: “No other interventions on record have reduced emergency admissions
across a population.”
Who discovered and implemented this program? And, what does
it look like in practice?
Monbiot has the story:
The Compassionate Frome project was launched in 2013 by Helen
Kingston, a GP there. She kept encountering patients who seemed defeated by the
medicalisation of their lives: treated as if they were a cluster of symptoms
rather than a human being who happened to have health problems. Staff at her
practice were stressed and dejected by what she calls “silo working”.
So, with
the help of the NHS group Health Connections Mendip and the town council, her practice
set up a directory of agencies and community groups. This let them see where
the gaps were, which they then filled with new groups for people with
particular conditions. They employed “health connectors” to help people plan
their care, and most interestingly trained voluntary “community connectors” to
help their patients find the support they needed.
Sometimes
this meant handling debt or housing problems, sometimes joining choirs or lunch
clubs or exercise groups or writing workshops or men’s sheds (where men make
and mend things together). The point was to break a familiar cycle of misery:
illness reduces people’s ability to socialise, which leads in turn to isolation
and loneliness, which then exacerbates illness.
Why does it work?
Social stress causes inflammation and inflammation is not
your friend when you are ill:
… people
without strong social connections, or who suffer from social stress (such as
rejection and broken relationships), are more prone to inflammation. In the
evolutionary past, social isolation exposed us to a higher risk of predation
and sickness. So the immune system appears to have evolved to listen to the
social environment, ramping up inflammation when we become isolated, in the
hope of protecting us against wounding and disease. In other words, isolation
causes inflammation, and inflammation can cause further isolation and
depression.
It’s not exactly news:
A
famous paper published in PLOS Medicine in 2010reviewed 148 studies, involving
300,000 people, and discovered that those with strong social relationships had
a 50% lower chance of death across the average study period (7.5 years) than
those with weak connections. “The magnitude of this effect,” the paper reports,
“is comparable with quitting smoking.” A celebrated study in 1945 showed that children in orphanages died through
lack of human contact. Now we know that the same thing can apply to all of us.
Dozens
of subsequent papers reinforce these conclusions. For example, HIV patients
with strong social support have lower levels of
the virus than those without. Women have better chances of surviving
colorectal cancer if they have strong connections. Young children who
are socially isolated appear more likely
to suffer from coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes in
adulthood. Most remarkably, older patients with either one or two chronic
diseases do not have higher death rates than those who are not suffering from
chronic disease – as long as they have high levels of social support.
We assume that Frome, in the county of Somerset, is a
relatively homogeneous British town. It does not suffer from cultural
diversity. We recall, because Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam researched the
issue, that more diversity lowers social capital. More diversity causes people
to hunker down, to stay within themselves and their families, to avoid social
contacts where they do not know the rules and thus run a constant risk of
offending. Diversity isolates people.
So, we are forced to conclude that diversity, per se, is not
only confusing. It will damage community ties, draw down your social capital
and will make you sick… or, if you are already sick, it will make you sicker.
SS: "It’s not exactly news..."
ReplyDeleteIt certainly isn't. It's the direct consequence of loving your neighbor as you love yourself.
So an article about mental health through communal ties becomes a calling against cultural diversity?
ReplyDeleteI see the original study from Putnam was in 2007. Here's a more recent article, 2016. Like most scientific debates, ideas continue to evolve and hopefully move towards more subtly of conclusions, and probably we all see what we want to see, scientists and everyone alike.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/does-diversity-create-distrust
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Sociologists Maria Abascal, of Princeton University, and Delia Baldassari, of New York University, published a paper late last year which refutes Putnam’s conclusions. After reanalyzing the same dataset used by Putnam, Abascal and Baldassari asserted that when it comes to distrust and diversity, most of the distrust is expressed by Whites who feel uncomfortable living amongst racial minorities.
In other words, greater distrust may stem from prejudice rather than from diversity per se. Therefore, Putnam’s conclusion that racial diversity leads to less altruism and cooperation amongst neighbors was incorrect. If there is a downside to diversity, it has less to do with the behavior of racial minorities and more to do with how Whites feel when living amongst non-Whites.
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The trouble with doing a google search to discover a rejoinder is that the googler (is that a word?) is often completely ignorant of the subject matter.
ReplyDeleteIn fact, this is a quote from the opening paragraph of the Summary and Results section of the Abascal and Baldassari paper:
"Nonwhites and immigrants are less trusting than native-born whites..."
But let's continue... a mere glance at Fig 5, which served as the basis for the absurd claims regarding white persons, shows that all the effects reported are near-microscopic (the scale is graduated in tenths of a standard deviation). To put it in context, tbe mean height of US males is 69.1",and the SD is 2.9". So we're talking about a difference smaller than the height difference between men who are 69.1" and 69.4". A bad haircut could change your perception. It reminds me of the claims made about Paris reducing the global temperature by 0.2-0.9 C. Such microscopic effects are not even detectable in the noise (variation) of global temperature measurement.
This is a perfect example of why sociology is a joke subject, and why Ares is perpetually amusing.
Redacted, I see, sociology is a joke when it find conclusions you disagree with, and its evidence for your way of seeing the world when it supports your conclusions. Or we could go back to Rush Limbaugh, "Never trust the facts of people with causes."
ReplyDeleteAres, you are a case in point. You are blind to your own worldview. You just think you’re smart. You ain’t.
ReplyDeleteSociology is a joke.
And “causes” will never report (much less acknowledge) the contra-arguments of their opponents.
Wake up. Grow up.