`'The collection will offer a unique range of work, both in terms of topics and of theoretical perspectives, written by leading scholars from around the world. It will be an essential resource for teaching and research' - Mel Bartley, Principal Research Fellow, University College, London
`This impressive collection gives a unique insight into current debates in the social sciences in the broad domain of health, illness and health care. By bringing together the perspectives of leading North American, European and Australasian scholars, focusing on social and cultural issues, the text provides the reader with a rich tapestry of stimulating ideas and analyses of great value' - Ian Robinson, Director for the Study of Health, Sickness and Disablement, Brunel University
`Society has growing expectations in terms of health. The editors and contributors to this handbook are to be congratulated on providing an essential route-map for the social sciences who will play a central role in future debates on health and health care' - Denny Vger, Professor of Medical Sociology, Stockholm University
"The Handbook of Social Studies in Health & Medicine is a must for the practitioner and teacher of social science of health and medical care. To read it is to be updated and upgraded concerning theory, empirical findings and policy implications. To have it on the shelf means ready reference to current comprehensive thinking and applications. The Handbook can also be readily adopted as a basic text for upper division and graduate classes in medical sociology and anthropology as well as for social science classes in public health, nursing, medicine, allied health sciences or health care policy and management."
Gary L. Albrechtis a Fellow of the Royal Belgian Academy of Arts and Sciences, Extraordinary Guest Professor of Social Sciences, University of Leuven, Belgium and Professor Emeritus of Public Health and ofDisabilityand Human Development at the University of Illinois at Chicago. After receiving his Ph.D. from Emory University, he has served on the faculties of Emory University in Sociology and Psychiatry, Northwestern University in Sociology, Rehabilitation Medicine and the Kellogg School of Management and the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) in the School of Public Health and in the Department of Disability and Human Development. Since retiring from the UIC in 2005, he divides his time between Europe and the United States. He works in Boulder, Colorado and Brussels, Belgium. He was recently a Scholar in Residence at the Maison des Sciences de lHomme (MSH) in Paris, a visiting Fellow at Nuffield College, the University of Oxford and a Fellow in Residence at the Royal Flemish Academy of Science and Arts, Brussels Susan C. Scrimshaw, Ph.D., is currently the President of The Sage Colleges in Troy, NY. Prior to her appointment as President of The Sage Colleges, Dr. Scrimshaw was President of Simmons College in Boston, Massachusetts. She was dean of the School of Public Health, and professor of community health sciences and of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) from 1994 through June 2006. Prior to becoming dean at UIC in 1994, she was associate dean of public health and professor of public health and anthropology at the University of California at Los Angeles.
Dr. Scrimshaw is a graduate of Barnard College and obtained her M.A. and Ph.D. in anthropology from Columbia University. Her research includes community participatory research methods, addressing health disparities, improving pregnancy outcomes, violence prevention, health literacy, and culturally appropriate delivery of health care. She is a member of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academies, where she has been elected a member of the governing council and serves on The Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP), a joint unit of the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. She is also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Anthropological Association, and the Institute of Medicine of Chicago.
While in Chicago, Dr. Scrimshaw was an appointed member of the Chicago Board of Health and Illinois State Board of Health. She chaired the IOM Committee on Communication for Behavior Change in the 21st Century: Improving the Health of Diverse Populations, and served as a member of the IOM Committee on Health Literacy. She is a past president of the board of directors of the U.S.-Mexico Foundation for Science, former chair of the Association of Schools of Public Health, and past president of the Society for Medical Anthropology. Her ho...
Introduction - Gary L Albrecht, Ray Fitzpatrick and Susan C Scrimshaw PART ONE: SOCIAL AND CULTURAL FRAMEWORKS OF ANALYSIS The History of the Changing Concepts of Health and Illness - Bryan S Turner Outline of a General Model of Illness Categories Social Theorizing about Health and Illness - David Armstrong Classification and Process in Sociomedical Understanding - Robert A Rubinstein, Susan C Scrimshaw and Suzanne E Morrisey Towards a Multilevel View of Sociomedical Methodology The Social Construction of Medicine and the Body - Deborah Lupton A Taxonomy of Research Concerned with Place and Health - Ralph Catalano and Kate E Pickett The Globalization of Health and Disease - Emily C Zielinski Guti[ac]errez and Carl Kendall The Health Transition and Global Change The Social Causation of Health and Illness - Johannes Siegrist Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health - Stephanie A Robert and James S House Integrating Individual-, Community-, and Societal-Level Theory and Research Gender and Health - Sandra D Lane and Donald A Cibula Critical Perspectives on Health and Aging - Carroll L Estes and Karen W Linkins The Social Context of the New Genetics - Sarah Cunningham-Burley and Mary Boulton PART TWO: THE EXPERIENCE OF HEALTH AND ILLNESS Cultural Variation in the Experience of Health and Illness - Ann McElroy and Mary Ann Jezewski Ethnography and Network Analysis - Robert T Trotter II The Study of Social Context in Cultures and Societies Personal Experience of Illness - Arthur Kleinman and Don Seeman Clinical Narratives and the Study of Contemporary Doctor-Patient Relationships - Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good and Byron J Good Accounting for Disease and Distress - Margaret Lock Morals of the Normal and Abnormal Experiencing Chronic Illness - Kathy Charmaz The Global Emergence of Disability - Gary L Albrecht and Lois M Verbrugge Reproduction and Assisted Reproductive Technologies - Hel[ac]ena Ragon[ac]e and Sharla K Willis Health-Care Utilization and Barriers to Health Care - Judith D Kasper Concepts and Measurement of Health Status and Health-Related Quality of Life - Colleen A McHorney Health Behavior - Thomas R Prohaska, Karen E Peters and Jan S Warren From Research to Community Practice PART THREE: HEALTH-CARE SYSTEMS AND PRACTICES The Medical Profession - David Coburn and Evan Willis Knowledge, Power, and Autonomy The Sociological Character of Health-Care Markets - Donald W Light Medical Uncertainty Revisited - Ren[ac]ee C Fox Alternative Health Practices and Systems - Sarah Cant and Ursula Sharma Comparative Health Sytems - Linda M Whiteford and Lois LaCivita Nixon Emerging Convergences and Globalization The Patient's Perspective Regarding Appropriate Health Care - Angela Coulter and Ray Fitzpatrick Consumer and Community Participation - Deena White A Reassessment of Process, Impact and Value An Expanded Conceptual Framework of Equity - Lu Ann Aday Implications for Assessing Health Policy Resources and Rationing - Stephen Harrison and Michael Moran Managing Supply and Demand in Health Care Reconfiguring Health Policy - Steven Lewis, Marcel Saulnier and Marc Renaud Simple Truths, Complex Solutions