Karbasi Arvin B, Iloegbu Chukwuemeka, Ruan Christina, Osei-Tutu Nana, Patel Kahini, Frerichs Leah, Patena John, Vieira Dorice, Adenikinju Deborah, Samuels Lydia, Gyamfi Joyce, Peprah Emmanuel
Department of Global and Environmental Health, Implementing Sustainable Evidence-based interventions through Engagement (ISEE) Lab, NYU School of Global Public Health, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 21;20(8):e0328515. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0328515. eCollection 2025.
The syndemic framework provides a critical lens for understanding the complex interplay between HIV/AIDS, mental health (MH) conditions, and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in Africa. This scoping review explores how these conditions converge to form a syndemic that disproportionately affects vulnerable populations - particularly people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWH). Contextual factors such as stigma, lower socioeconomic resulting in poverty, gender, resource limitations, and fragmented healthcare systems exacerbate these interrelated conditions, posing significant challenges to individuals and their health.
A scoping review was conducted to examine the syndemic interactions between HIV/AIDS, MH, and NCDs across Africa. Utilizing the PRISMA-ScR framework and a predefined inclusion criterion, literature searches were conducted in the following databases: PubMed/Medline (OVID), Web of Science (all databases), Web of Science (core collection), Global Health, Cumulative Index of Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), MEDLINE OVID, Psychinfo (OVID), Psychinfo (proquest); and Psychinfo (psychnet) in March 2024. Articles were screened independently by two peer reviewers and conflicts were resolved by a third reviewer. Data were extracted to summarize study characteristics, prevalence rates, and the contextual factors that underpin syndemic interactions among HIV/AIDS, MH and NCDs.
An initial search retrieved 5937 articles, with 2913 articles remaining after removal of duplicates. Title and abstract screening further excluded 2706 articles. In total, 207 full-text articles were assessed, of which 17 publications were extracted and included in the review. The scoping review identified a significant prevalence of multi-morbidities amongst PLWH, particularly within hypertension, diabetes, and depression. Women and older adults were disproportionately affected, with gender and age disparities shaping health outcomes. Contextual factors such as stigma, socioeconomic barriers, and fragmented healthcare systems were consistently reported as key contributors to worsening such multi-morbidities. In many publications, NCDs and MH conditions were undiagnosed or poorly managed, complicating HIV treatment and reducing the quality of life. Individual and structural resource limitations, along with poor healthcare integration, further hindered effective care.
This scoping review underscores the urgent need for integrated healthcare models to address the syndemic of HIV/AIDS, NCDs, and MH in Africa. Interventions should prioritize stigma reduction, capacity building, and comprehensive care to address the underlying socioeconomic determinants of health among PLWH. Strengthening healthcare systems and promoting holistic, patient-centered care is essential for reducing disparities, improving health outcomes, and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Future research should expand geographic and demographic coverage to capture the full scope of these syndemic relationships in diverse African contexts.
疾病综合征框架为理解非洲艾滋病毒/艾滋病、心理健康(MH)状况和非传染性疾病(NCDs)之间复杂的相互作用提供了一个关键视角。本范围综述探讨了这些状况如何汇聚形成一种疾病综合征,对弱势群体,特别是艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者(PLWH)产生了不成比例的影响。诸如耻辱感、导致贫困的较低社会经济地位、性别、资源限制以及碎片化的医疗系统等背景因素加剧了这些相互关联的状况,给个人及其健康带来了重大挑战。
进行了一项范围综述,以研究非洲各地艾滋病毒/艾滋病、心理健康和非传染性疾病之间的疾病综合征相互作用。利用PRISMA-ScR框架和预定义的纳入标准,在以下数据库中进行文献检索:PubMed/Medline(OVID)、科学网(所有数据库)、科学网(核心合集)、全球健康、联合健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)、MEDLINE OVID、Psychinfo(OVID)、Psychinfo(proquest);以及2024年3月的Psychinfo(psychnet)。文章由两名同行评审员独立筛选,冲突由第三名评审员解决。提取数据以总结研究特征、患病率以及支撑艾滋病毒/艾滋病、心理健康和非传染性疾病之间疾病综合征相互作用的背景因素。
初步检索得到5937篇文章,去除重复项后还剩2913篇文章。标题和摘要筛选又排除了2706篇文章。总共评估了207篇全文文章,其中17篇出版物被提取并纳入综述。该范围综述发现艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者中存在显著的多种疾病共患情况,尤其是高血压、糖尿病和抑郁症。女性和老年人受到的影响尤为严重,性别和年龄差异影响着健康结果。诸如耻辱感、社会经济障碍和碎片化的医疗系统等背景因素一直被报告为导致此类多种疾病共患情况恶化的关键因素。在许多出版物中,非传染性疾病和心理健康状况未得到诊断或管理不善,使艾滋病毒治疗复杂化并降低了生活质量。个人和结构资源限制以及医疗整合不佳进一步阻碍了有效护理。
本范围综述强调迫切需要综合医疗模式来应对非洲的艾滋病毒/艾滋病、非传染性疾病和心理健康疾病综合征。干预措施应优先减少耻辱感、进行能力建设并提供全面护理以解决艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者健康的潜在社会经济决定因素。加强医疗系统并促进以患者为中心的整体护理对于减少差距、改善健康结果和实现可持续发展目标至关重要。未来的研究应扩大地理和人口覆盖范围,以全面了解非洲不同背景下这些疾病综合征关系的全貌。