April 15, 2026 · Field note

The River Beneath Numbers Psychosocial

The River Beneath the Numbers Psychosocial Stress, Inflammation, and the Anthropology of Disease Still Water / Hidden Flow The heart appears still—like water in the Everglades. But beneath, unseen currents move slowly over years. A heart attack rarely comes out of nowhere. We attribute it to diabetes, hypertension, cho

The River Beneath Numbers Psychosocial
Originally from The Physician Anthropologist archive

The River Beneath the Numbers Psychosocial Stress, Inflammation, and the Anthropology of Disease Still Water / Hidden Flow The heart appears still—like water in the Everglades. But beneath, unseen currents move slowly over years. A heart attack rarely comes out of nowhere.

We attribute it to diabetes, hypertension, cholesterol. Increasingly, however, we understand that inflammation is the common pathway. The Narrowing Path Atherosclerosis is not an event.

It is a gradual narrowing—of vessels, of choices, of possibilities. Over decades, medicine has identified many causes. When explanations fail, we retreat into “socioeconomic factors”—often a euphemism for deeper instability.

Liminal Ground Between water and land lies the hammock—a liminal space. Anthropologist Victor Turner described “liminal periods”—times of uncertainty when individuals are more vulnerable. For many Indigenous communities, this state has not been temporary—it has endured.

Marks of Stress Stress leaves marks—on landscapes, on bodies, on lives. Psychosocial stress becomes behavior: smoking, alcohol, sedentary life, poor diet—and then biology: inflammation, obesity, diabetes. The Unseen Fire Inflammation is a quiet fire.

It does not announce itself—until it does. We prescribe medications—but often we are treating numbers, not people. Like sweeping dust under the carpet.

Listening Before the prescription pad—there is a moment we often miss. Disease is what physicians diagnose. Illness is what patients experience.

We are very good at curing. We are still learning how to heal. “We measure disease.

We must learn to hear illness.” Sudah Yehuda Kovesh Shaheb Consultant Endocrinologist & Medical Anthropologist

Original Blogger URL: https://medicoanthropologist.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-river-beneath-numbers-psychosocial.html