TY - BOOK AU - White,Kevin TI - An introduction to the sociology of health and illness SN - 0761963995 AV - RA418 .W45 2017 PY - 2017/// CY - Los Angeles: PB - SAGE Publications KW - Social medicine N1 - Includes bibliography and index; 1.Introduction Sociology, Genetics, Social Mobility and Lifestyle The Sociological Perspective Postmodernity and Sociology Sociological Approaches to Health and Illness Political Economy and Marxist Approaches Parsonian Sociology of Health Foucault's Sociology of Health Feminist Approaches Bringing the Approaches Together Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading 2.The Social Construction of Medical Knowledge Making Reality Problematic: The Problem of the Medical Model of Disease Medical Knowledge Mediates Social Relations Masturbatory Insanity Hysteria The Technical Realm of Medical Practice Medical Technology and Social Relations The Sociology of Medical Knowledge Fleck and Representations Fleck's Sociology of Medical Knowledge Syphilis Anatomical Drawings Thought Styles After Fleck Fleck, Foucault and Kuhn Applying Fleck Conclusion Summary Note continued: Discussion Questions Further Reading 3.The Development of the Sociology of Health The Relationship Between Sociology and Medicine Medical Bias in the Sociology of Health Challenging Medicine Social Aspects of Disease The Critique of the Medical Model Key Concepts in the Sociology of Health The Concept of Medicalization Disease: Nature or Society? Medicalization and Women The Social Functions of Medical Knowledge and Practice The Development of Medicalization Case Study: Gambling Case Study: Alcoholism Developments in the Medical Profession Paediatrics Psychiatry Gerontology General Practice Characteristics of the Medicalization of Society Case Study: Learning Disabilities, Dyslexia and the Medicalization of the Classroom Assessing Medicalization Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading 4.Postmodernity, Epidemiology and Neo-Liberalism Postmodernity Note continued: Liberalism and the Development of Neo-Liberalism in Health Policy The Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries The Dismantling of Welfare and the Resurgence of Neo-Liberalism Epidemiology: The Early Foundations Limitations of the Risk Factor and Lifestyle Explanations Developing a Sociological Model of Disease: Disease Classified by Social Cause Epidemiology and Statistics Psychosocial Perspectives on Social Inequalities in Health Stress Social Support The Social Drift Hypothesis Talking About the Diseased Self Community, Social Capital and Inequality Social Capital Social Capital or Income Inequality? Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading 5.Materialist Approaches to the Sociology of Health What Causes Disease: The Materialist Explanation Occupation Diet Housing Case Study: Transformations in the Social Structure of Eastern Europe Class as Occupational Position Note continued: Untangling Class and Socio-economic Status Structural Position as Socio-economic Status The Classical Marxist Approach The Political and Economic Functions of Medicine The Medical Profession in a Marxist Analysis Modifications of Classical Marxism and Changes in Capitalism Changes in Class Theory and the Sociology of Health Transformations of the Medical Profession Technological Change Commodification Corporate Medicine The Body, Social Structures and Bourdieu Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading 6.Parsons, American Sociology of Medicine and the Sick Role Parsons and the Professions Diagnostic Variations Prescribing Activities Parsons: People Act Rather Than Behave The Sick Role In Defence of the Sick Role Sickness and American Values The End of the Golden Age of Doctoring Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading Note continued: 7.Foucault and the Sociology of Medical Knowledge Foucault: The Most General Picture Foucault's Sociology of Health Disciplines of Knowledge, Disciplines of Power: Power/Knowledge Foucault's History of Medicine The Body Historical and Metaphorical Representations of the Body Foucault's Body The Anatomico-Metaphysical Register of the Body Technico-Political Register of the Body Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading 8.Health, Gender and Feminism Why are there More Women Patients? Medicalization Are Women More Depressed than Men? Different Forms of Feminism Liberal Feminism Radical Feminism Marxist Feminism Patriarchal Science and Medicine Feminism and the Critique of Technology Case Study: Foucault and Feminism and the Body Bringing Out the Foucauldian-Feminist Position: Screening Men, Gender and Health Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Note continued: Further Reading 9.Race, Ethnicity and Health Race Ethnicity Aboriginality, `Race' and Disease Racist Bias in Drug Trials Problems with the Appropriation of Ethnicity in Medical Explanations The Genetic Explanation The Appeal of the Genetic Explanation The Sociological Critique of Genetics Conclusion Summary Discussion Questions Further Reading UR - http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0658/2001132943-d.html UR - http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0658/2001132943-t.html ER -