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      Stress, migration, and allostatic load: a model based on Mexican migrants in Columbus, Ohio

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          Abstract

          Background

          Immigration is a disruptive event with multiple implications for health. Stressors, including family separation, acculturation, job insecurity, restricted mobility, sojourns, dangerous border crossings, stigmatization, and marginalization, shape immigrant health in ways we are only beginning to untangle. Around the world, there are over 200 million international migrants. In 2015, there were 43.2 million immigrants living in the US, 26.8% of whom were born in Mexico. Investigating how stress affects health among migrants facilitates better understanding of their experiences.

          Methods

          Here, we review existing research on stress and how allostatic load varies among migrants with specific attention to Mexican migrants in the US. Next, we explore research incorporating biomarkers of allostasis and narratives of migration and settlement to examine disease risks of Mexican migrants residing in Columbus, Ohio. This mixed-methods approach allowed us to examine how social stressors may influence self-reports of health differentially from associations with assessed discrimination and physiological biomarkers of health.

          Results

          These data sources are not significantly associated. Neither narratives nor self-reports of health provide significant proxies for participants’ physiological health.

          Conclusions

          We propose, the pairing of objectively assessed health profiles with narratives of migration better illustrate risks migrants face, while allowing us to discern pathways through which future health challenges may arise. Immigration and acculturation to a new nation are biologically and culturally embedded processes, as are stress and allostatic responses. To understand how the former covary with the latter requires a mixed-methods bioethnographic approach. Differences across multiple social and physiological systems, affect individual health over time. We propose incorporating physiological biomarkers and allostatic load with migrants’ narratives of their migration to unravel complex relationships between acculturation and health.

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          Most cited references43

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          The MOS short-form general health survey. Reliability and validity in a patient population.

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            Forming a story: the health benefits of narrative.

            Writing about important personal experiences in an emotional way for as little as 15 minutes over the course of three days brings about improvements in mental and physical health. This finding has been replicated across age, gender, culture, social class, and personality type. Using a text-analysis computer program, it was discovered that those who benefit maximally from writing tend to use a high number of positive-emotion words, a moderate amount of negative-emotion words, and increase their use of cognitive words over the days of writing. These findings suggest that the formation of a narrative is critical and is an indicator of good mental and physical health. Ongoing studies suggest that writing serves the function of organizing complex emotional experiences. Implications for these findings for psychotherapy are briefly discussed.
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              Uncertainty and stress: Why it causes diseases and how it is mastered by the brain

              The term 'stress' - coined in 1936 - has many definitions, but until now has lacked a theoretical foundation. Here we present an information-theoretic approach - based on the 'free energy principle' - defining the essence of stress; namely, uncertainty. We address three questions: What is uncertainty? What does it do to us? What are our resources to master it? Mathematically speaking, uncertainty is entropy or 'expected surprise'. The 'free energy principle' rests upon the fact that self-organizing biological agents resist a tendency to disorder and must therefore minimize the entropy of their sensory states. Applied to our everyday life, this means that we feel uncertain, when we anticipate that outcomes will turn out to be something other than expected - and that we are unable to avoid surprise. As all cognitive systems strive to reduce their uncertainty about future outcomes, they face a critical constraint: Reducing uncertainty requires cerebral energy. The characteristic of the vertebrate brain to prioritize its own high energy is captured by the notion of the 'selfish brain'. Accordingly, in times of uncertainty, the selfish brain demands extra energy from the body. If, despite all this, the brain cannot reduce uncertainty, a persistent cerebral energy crisis may develop, burdening the individual by 'allostatic load' that contributes to systemic and brain malfunction (impaired memory, atherogenesis, diabetes and subsequent cardio- and cerebrovascular events). Based on the basic tenet that stress originates from uncertainty, we discuss the strategies our brain uses to avoid surprise and thereby resolve uncertainty.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                614-292-4149 , tuggle.26@osu.edu
                Journal
                J Physiol Anthropol
                J Physiol Anthropol
                Journal of Physiological Anthropology
                BioMed Central (London )
                1880-6791
                1880-6805
                13 December 2018
                13 December 2018
                2018
                : 37
                : 28
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ISNI 0000 0001 2285 7943, GRID grid.261331.4, Department of Anthropology, , Ohio State University, ; 4034 Smith Laboratory, 174 W. 18th Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210 USA
                [2 ]ISNI 0000 0001 2285 7943, GRID grid.261331.4, College of Public Health, , Ohio State University, ; 250 Cunz Hall, 1841 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210 USA
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1084-0906
                Article
                188
                10.1186/s40101-018-0188-4
                6293576
                30545424
                85e88d94-b153-4abb-9c22-53ac8487fe51
                © The Author(s). 2018

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

                History
                : 23 July 2018
                : 26 November 2018
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2018

                Anthropology
                acculturation,biomarkers,health,immigration,stressors
                Anthropology
                acculturation, biomarkers, health, immigration, stressors

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