Syndemic Clustering of Noncommunicable Disease Risk Among Syrian Refugees and Jordanian Nationals: A Subnational Analysis of the WHO STEPS 2019 Survey

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Abstract

Understanding the intersection of noncommunicable disease (NCD) risk and displacement in fragile settings is critical for equitable global health policy. This study employs a syndemic framework to investigate the clustering of behavioral risk factors—tobacco use, insufficient fruit intake, and physical inactivity—among Syrian refugees and Jordanian nationals, using data from the WHO STEPS 2019 survey. A composite risk score was constructed, and subnational analyses were conducted by sex and region. Among 2707 adults with complete data, 61.5% exhibited all three risk behaviors. Syrian refugees had a significantly higher prevalence of full-risk clustering (67.8%) than Jordanians (52.2%, p < 0.001), with the North and Center governorates displaying the greatest burden. Syrian women exhibited the highest syndemic risk. No statistically significant associations were found between the risk score and self-reported hypertension or diabetes. These findings underscore the need for gender-sensitive, subnationally targeted NCD strategies that address the structural drivers of health inequity in displacement-affected settings.

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