Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T18:41:22.212Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

ENDOGAMY, CONSANGUINITY AND THE HEALTH IMPLICATIONS OF CHANGING MARITAL CHOICES IN THE UK PAKISTANI COMMUNITY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2016

Neil Small*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Health Studies, University of Bradford, UK
Alan H. Bittles
Affiliation:
Centre for Comparative Genomics, Murdoch University, Perth, Australia School of Medical and Health Sciences, Edith Cowan University, Perth, Australia
Emily S. Petherick
Affiliation:
School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, UK
John Wright
Affiliation:
Bradford Institute for Health Research, UK
*
1Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Summary

The biraderi (brotherhood) is a long-established, widely prevalent dimension of social stratification in Pakistani communities worldwide. Alongside consanguinity, it offers a route for cementing social solidarities and so has strong socio-biological significance. A detailed breakdown of biraderi affiliation among participants in an ongoing birth cohort study in the northern English city of Bradford is presented. There is historical resilience of intra-biraderi marriage, but with a secular decline in prevalence across all biraderi and considerable reductions in some. While a majority of marriages in all biraderi are consanguineous the prevalence varies, ranging from over 80% to under 60%. In consanguineous unions, first cousin marriages account for more than 50% in five of the fifteen biraderi and >40% in six others. Within-biraderi marriage and consanguinity enhance genetic stratification, thereby increasing rates of genomic homozygosity and the increased expression of recessive genetic disorders. The trends reported constitute putative signals of generational change in the marital choices in this community.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press, 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barakat, B. & Basten, S. (2014) Modelling the constraints on consanguineous marriage when fertility declines. Demographic Research 30, 277312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baston, L. (2012) The Bradford Earthquake: Lessons from Bradford West for Election Campaigning and Political Engagement in Britain. Democratic Audit, Liverpool.Google Scholar
Bhopal, R., Petherick, E. S., Wright, J. & Small, N. (2014) Potential social, economic and general health benefits of consanguineous marriage: results from the Born in Bradford cohort study. European Journal of Public Health 24, 862869.Google Scholar
Bittles, A. H. (2001) Consanguinity and its relevance to clinical genetics. Clinical Genetics 60, 8998.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bittles, A. H. (2008) A Community Genetics perspective on consanguineous marriage. Public Health Genomics 11, 324330.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bittles, A. H. (2009) Consanguinity, genetic drift and genetic diseases in populations with reduced numbers of founders. In Speicher, M., Antonarakis, S. E. & Motulsky, A. G. (eds) Human Genetics – Principles and Approaches, 4th Edition. Springer, Heidelberg, pp. 507528.Google Scholar
Bittles, A. H. (2012) Consanguinity in Context. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ISBN: 978-0-521-78186-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bittles, A. H. (2013) Consanguineous marriages and congenital anomalies. Lancet 382, 13161317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bittles, A. H. & Black, M. L. (2010) Evolution in health and medicine Sackler colloquium: consanguinity, human evolution and complex diseases. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 107, 17791786.Google Scholar
Bittles, A. H., Mason, W. M., Greene, J. & Appaji Rao, N. A. (1991) Reproductive behavior and health in consanguineous marriages. Science 252, 789794.Google Scholar
Bittles, A. H. & Small, N. (2015) Consanguinity, genetics and definitions of kinship in the UK Pakistani population. Journal of Biosocial Science doi: 10.1017/S0021932015000449.Google Scholar
Cameron, H. (2006) An examination of the demographic impact of ‘transnational marriage’ between citizens of the UK and the Indian sub-continent. Paper presented at Political Demography: Ethnic, National and Religious Dimensions. London School of Economics.Google Scholar
Campbell, H., Rudan, I., Bittles, A. H. & Wright, A. F. (2009) Human population structure, outbreeding and human health. Genome Medicine 1, 91.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corry, P. C. (2014) Consanguinity and prevalence patterns of inherited disease in the UK Pakistani community. Human Heredity 77, 207216.Google Scholar
Darr, A., Small, N., Ahmad, W. I. U., Atkin, K., Corry, P., Benson, J., Morton, R. & Modell, B. (2013) Examining the family-centred approach to genetic testing and counselling among UK Pakistanis: a community perspective. Journal of Community Genetics 4, 4957.Google Scholar
Darr, A., Small, N., Ahmad, W., Atkin, K., Corry, P. & Modell, B. (2015) Addressing key issues in the consanguinity-related risk of autosomal recessive disorders in consanguineous communities: lessons from a qualitative study of British Pakistanis. Journal of Community Genetics doi 10.1007/s12687-015-0252-2.Google Scholar
de Koning, M., Storms, O. & Bartels, E. (2014) Legal “ban” on transnational cousin-marriages: citizen debate in the Netherlands. Transnational Social Review: A Social Work Journal 4, 226241.Google Scholar
Gazal, S., Sahbatou, M., Babron, M-C., Genin, E. & Leutenegger, A-L. (2015) High level of inbreeding in final phase of 1000 Genomes Project. Nature Scientific Reports 5, 17453.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grjibovski, A., Magnus, P. & Stoltenberg, C. (2009) Decrease of consanguinity among parents of children born in Norway to women of Pakistani origin: a registry-based study. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health 37, 232238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hamamy, H., Antonarakis, S. E., Cavalli-Sforza, L. L., Temtamy, S., Romeo, G., ten Kate, L. P. et al. (2011) Consanguineous marriages: pearls and perils. Geneva International Consanguinity Workshop Report. Genetics in Medicine 13, 841847.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hooper, E. & Hamid, A. I. (2003) Scoping Study on Social Exclusion in Pakistan: A Summary of the Findings. Department for International Development, London, pp. 134.Google Scholar
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (2010) Global Burden of Disease. WHO, Geneva.Google Scholar
Jabeen, N. & Malik, S. (2014) Consanguinity and its sociodemographic differentials in Bhimber District, Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan. Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition 32, 301313.Google Scholar
Jalkh, N., Sahbatou, M., Chouery, E., Megarbane, A., Leutenegger, A-L. & Serre, J. L. (2015) Genome-wide inbreeding estimation within Lebanese communities using SNP arrays. European Journal of Human Genetics 23, 13641369.Google Scholar
Liversage, A. & Rytter, M. (2015) A cousin marriage equals a forced marriage: regulations, discourses and strategies of transnational consanguineous marriages in Denmark. In Shaw, A. & Raz, A. (eds) Cousin Marriages: Between Tradition, Genetic Risk and Cultural Change. Berghahn Books, Oxford & New York, pp. 130153.Google Scholar
Meulemans, H., Mortelmans, D., Liefooghe, R., Mertens, P., Zaidi, S. A., Solangi, M. F. & De Muynck, A. (2003) The limits to patient compliance with directly observed therapy for tuberculosis: a socio-medical study in Pakistan. International Journal of Health Planning and Management 17, 249267.Google Scholar
Michael, L. (2004) Leadership in Transition? Issues of Representation and Youth in British Asian communities. ESRC/OPPM Postgraduate Research Programme, Working Paper No. 12.Google Scholar
Mohmand, S. K. (2011) Patrons, brothers and landlords: competing for the vote in rural Pakistan. DPhil thesis, University of Sussex.Google Scholar
Raynor, P. Born in Bradford Collaborative Group (2008) Born in Bradford, a cohort study of babies born in Bradford, and their parents: protocol for the recruitment phase. BMC Public Health 8, 327. URL: www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/8/327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samad, Y. & Eade, J. (2002) Community Perceptions of Forced Marriage. Community Liaison Unit, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London.Google Scholar
Seebohm, P., Henderson, P., Munn-Giddings, C., Thomas, P. & Yasmeen, S. (2005) Together We Will Change – Community Development, Mental Health and Diversity. Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health, London.Google Scholar
Shaw, A. (2000) Kinship and Continuity: Pakistani Families in Britain. Harwood Academic, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Shaw, A. (2009) Negotiating Risk: British Pakistani Experiences of Genetics. Berghahn, Oxford.Google Scholar
Shaw, A. (2014) Drivers of cousin marriage among British Pakistanis. Human Heredity 77, 2636.Google Scholar
Sheridan, E., Wright, J., Small, N., Corry, P., Oddie, S., Whibley, C. et al. (2013) Risk factors for congenital anomaly in a multiethnic birth cohort: an analysis of the Born in Bradford study. The Lancet 382, 13501359.Google Scholar
UNICEF, WHO, World Bank & UN-DESA Population Division (2014) Levels and Trends in Child Mortality. WHO, Geneva.Google Scholar
Uphoff, E., Pickett, K., Cabieses, B., Small, N. & Wright, J. (2013) A systematic review of the relationships between social capital and socioeconomic inequalities in health: a contribution to understanding the psychosocial pathway of health inequalities. International Journal for Equity in Health 12, 54.Google Scholar
WHO (2006) Medical Genetic Services in Developing Countries: The Ethical, Legal and Social Implications of Genetic Testing and Screening. WHO, Geneva.Google Scholar
Wright, J., Small, N., Raynor, P., Tufnell, D., Bhopal, R., Cameron, N. et al. (2013) Cohort profile: the Born in Bradford multi-ethnic family cohort study. International Journal of Epidemiology 42, 978991.Google Scholar
Zaman, M. (2008) Socio-cultural security, emotions and exchange marriages in an agrarian community. South Asia Research 28, 285298.CrossRefGoogle Scholar