TY - JOUR AU - S. M. Sardana AU - S. Timmer-Murillo AU - C. L. Larson AU - T. A. deRoon-Cassini A1 - AB - Health disparities in the United States are not produced by single risk factors but by interacting social and biological conditions that cluster within structurally marginalized communities. Poverty, violence, and poor physical and mental health form a reinforcing system of disadvantage that traditional healthcare models-organized around isolated diseases-are poorly equipped to address. This perspective examines these dynamics through a syndemic framework, which conceptualizes co-occurring conditions as mutually interacting epidemics intensified by social inequality. Drawing on interdisciplinary evidence from public health, medicine, and social science, we describe how poverty-related stressors such as housing instability, food insecurity, and barriers to healthcare intersect with exposure to interpersonal and structural violence to amplify risks for depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, chronic disease, and premature mortality. These interactions produce compounded health burdens that are disproportionately experienced by marginalized populations. Despite increasing attention to social determinants of health, current healthcare responses remain fragmented. Health systems frequently identify risks through screening for social needs or trauma exposure but lack the institutional infrastructure, reimbursement mechanisms, and cross-sector partnerships required to address them effectively. We argue that advancing health equity requires moving beyond additive models of care coordination toward syndemic-informed healthcare systems that intervene simultaneously on clustered conditions and their shared upstream drivers. We outline key priorities for practice, policy, and research, including linking screening to actionable care pathways, strengthening partnerships between healthcare and social service systems, and expanding workforce training to include structural and syndemic competency. AD - Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, United States.; Division of Trauma & Acute Care Surgery, Principle Investigator, Milwaukee Trauma Outcomes Project, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United States.; Division of Trauma & Acute Care Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United States. AN - 42079319 BT - Front Psychiatry C5 - Healthcare Disparities DO - 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1788042 DP - NLM ET - 20260416 JF - Front Psychiatry LA - eng N2 - Health disparities in the United States are not produced by single risk factors but by interacting social and biological conditions that cluster within structurally marginalized communities. Poverty, violence, and poor physical and mental health form a reinforcing system of disadvantage that traditional healthcare models-organized around isolated diseases-are poorly equipped to address. This perspective examines these dynamics through a syndemic framework, which conceptualizes co-occurring conditions as mutually interacting epidemics intensified by social inequality. Drawing on interdisciplinary evidence from public health, medicine, and social science, we describe how poverty-related stressors such as housing instability, food insecurity, and barriers to healthcare intersect with exposure to interpersonal and structural violence to amplify risks for depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, chronic disease, and premature mortality. These interactions produce compounded health burdens that are disproportionately experienced by marginalized populations. Despite increasing attention to social determinants of health, current healthcare responses remain fragmented. Health systems frequently identify risks through screening for social needs or trauma exposure but lack the institutional infrastructure, reimbursement mechanisms, and cross-sector partnerships required to address them effectively. We argue that advancing health equity requires moving beyond additive models of care coordination toward syndemic-informed healthcare systems that intervene simultaneously on clustered conditions and their shared upstream drivers. We outline key priorities for practice, policy, and research, including linking screening to actionable care pathways, strengthening partnerships between healthcare and social service systems, and expanding workforce training to include structural and syndemic competency. PY - 2026 SN - 1664-0640 (Print); 1664-0640 SP - 1788042 ST - Integrating evidence-based health approaches in U.S. healthcare settings: addressing the syndemics of poverty, health, and violence T1 - Integrating evidence-based health approaches in U.S. healthcare settings: addressing the syndemics of poverty, health, and violence T2 - Front Psychiatry TI - Integrating evidence-based health approaches in U.S. healthcare settings: addressing the syndemics of poverty, health, and violence U1 - Healthcare Disparities U3 - 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1788042 VL - 17 VO - 1664-0640 (Print); 1664-0640 Y1 - 2026 ER -