Merrill Singer Explained

Merrill Singer (b. October 6, 1950 McKeesport, Pennsylvania, USA)[1] is a medical anthropologist and professor emeritus in Anthropology at the University of Connecticut and in Community Medicine at the University of Connecticut Health Center. He is best known for his research on substance abuse, HIV/AIDS, syndemics, health disparities, and minority health.

Background

Singer studied anthropology at California State University, Northridge (Master of Arts, Anthropology, 1975) and completed a PhD in Anthropology at the University of Utah in 1979. He held a National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Department of Psychiatry, George Washington University (1979–80) and another at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine from 1982 to 1983.

He was a researcher, rising to Associate Director, at the Hispanic Health Council in Hartford, Connecticut from 1982 to 2007, and moved to the University of Connecticut in 2007, becoming Professor in 2008 and retiring in the late 2010s.[2]

Scholarship

As Director of the Center for Community Health Research at the Hispanic Health Council, he helped to develop the theoretical perspective within medical anthropology known as "critical medical anthropology". Singer also developed the public health concepts of "syndemics" and "oppression illness". Most recently, he has published a number of articles on "pluralea".

The first of these terms refers to the clustering of diseases in populations and the biological interaction of diseases in individual bodies. Moreover, the term syndemics also points to the determinant importance of social conditions in disease concentrations, interactions, and health consequences. In syndemics, the interaction of diseases or other adverse health conditions commonly arises because of adverse social conditions (e.g., poverty, exploitation, stigmatization, oppressive social relationships) that put socially devalued groups at heightened risk. The term oppression illness refers to the internalization of social discrimination and the health consequences of coming to accept one does not deserve to be healthy. The term pluralea refers to the adverse intersection of environmental crises and their health effects.

In his work on alcohol and drug use, Singer explains that all drugs are commodities and draws attention to social constructions of legitimate or legal and illegitimate or illegal drugs. In his book Drugging the Poor: Legal and Illegal Drugs and Social Inequality, Singer notes that all drugs are forms of self-medicating, and that distinctions of legal or illegal serve to reinforce social hierarchies and inequalities. Furthermore, Singer argues that drug use among the poor is a type of self-medicating in response to the pressures of being poor. Responding to ways illegal drug users are vilified, Singer argues that by using language of blame to describe drug users as responsible for deteriorating urban centers, “attention is diverted from the role of class inequality as a source of social misery.”

Singer has been the principal investigator on a series of U.S. federal and foundation funded drinking, drug use, and AIDS prevention grants since 1984. Recent grants include:

Additionally, he is co-editor with Pamela Erickson of the book series Advances in Critical Medical Anthropology with Left Coast Press.

Recognition

Personal life and family

Singer is the father of two children, Jake H. Singer (also known as Jacob Hillis Singer), an industrial designer, and Elyse Ona Singer, who is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Oklahoma.[3] [4]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Archived copy . 2013-05-09 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140726115922/http://www.nhsn.med.miami.edu/documents/cv/m_singer_cv_11.pdf . 2014-07-26 . Resume
  2. Web site: Merrill Singer Archives. SAPIENS. en-US. 2019-09-11.
  3. Web site: Elyse Singer. The University of Oklahoma. 2023-09-09. 2023-12-01.
  4. Web site: Elyse Singer. Google Scholar. 2023-12-01.