Making morbidity multiple: History, legacies, and possibilities for global health

Author:

Dixon Justin12ORCID,Mendenhall Emily34ORCID,Bosire Edna N45ORCID,Limbani Felix6ORCID,Ferrand Rashida A17ORCID,Chandler Clare I R2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Health Research Unit Zimbabwe (THRU ZIM), Biomedical Research and Training Institute, Harare, Zimbabwe

2. Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK

3. Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, United States

4. Faculty of Health Sciences, SAMRC Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

5. Brain and Mind Institute, Aga Khan University, Nairobi, Kenya

6. Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme, Blantyre, Malawi

7. Department of Clinical Research, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK

Abstract

Multimorbidity has been framed as a pressing global health challenge that exposes the limits of systems organised around single diseases. This article seeks to expand and strengthen current thinking around multimorbidity by analysing its construction within the field of global health. We suggest that the significance of multimorbidity lies not only in challenging divisions between disease categories but also in what it reveals about the culture and history of transnational biomedicine. Drawing on social research from sub-Saharan Africa to ground our arguments, we begin by describing the historical processes through which morbidity was made divisible in biomedicine and how the single disease became integral not only to disease control but to the extension of biopolitical power. Multimorbidity, we observe, is hoped to challenge single disease approaches but is assembled from the same problematic, historically-loaded categories that it exposes as breaking down. Next, we highlight the consequences of such classificatory legacies in everyday lives and suggest why frameworks and interventions to integrate care have tended to have limited traction in practice. Finally, we argue that efforts to align priorities and disciplines around a standardised biomedical definition of multimorbidity risks retracing the same steps. We call for transdisciplinary work across the field of global health around a more holistic, reflexive understanding of multimorbidity that foregrounds the culture and history of translocated biomedicine, the intractability of single disease thinking, and its often-adverse consequences in local worlds. We outline key domains within the architecture of global health where transformation is needed, including care delivery, medical training, the organisation of knowledge and expertise, global governance, and financing.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,General Medicine

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