4.2 Article

Under the Skin and into the Gut: Social Epidemiology of the Microbiome

Journal

CURRENT EPIDEMIOLOGY REPORTS
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 432-441

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s40471-018-0167-7

Keywords

Microbiome; Socioeconomic factors; Health disparities; Psychosocial stress; Social epidemiology; Population health; Built environment; Social relationships; Socioeconomic status; Race; ethnicity

Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R21AI121784-01]

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Purpose of the ReviewAs the science of the microbiome advances, social epidemiologists can contribute to understanding how the broader social environment shapes the microbiome over the life course. This review summarizes current research and describes potential mechanisms of the social epidemiology of the microbiome.Recent FindingsMost existing literature linking the social environment and the microbiome comes from animal models, focused on the impact of social interactions and psychosocial stress. Suggestive evidence of the importance of early life exposures, health behaviors, and the built environment also point to the importance of the social environment for the microbiome in humans.SummarySocial epidemiology as a field is well poised to contribute expertise in theory and measurement of the broader social environment to this new area, and to consider both the upstream and downstream mechanisms by which this environment gets under the skin and into the gut. As population-level microbiome data becomes increasingly available, we encourage investigation of the multi-level determinants of the microbiome and how the microbiome may link the social environment and health.

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