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"Health, Illness, and Medicine in Canada"
Second Edition
- Description
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- Contents
- Authors
- Reviews
- Lecturer Resources
- Teacher Resources
- Student Resources
- Sample Pages
- ebook
This third edition of Juanne Nancarrow Clarke's thorough and essential study of the sociology of health, illness, and medicine has been expanded and completely revised to include recent research findings and statistical data on how we try to stay healthy and how we respond to illness, on how we live and how we die. New chapters on nursing and midwifery and on complementary and alternative medicine have been written for this edition, which includes over 100 tables and figures, as well as numerous vignettes on such topics as medical technologies, pioneers in medicine, epidemics, environmental disasters, and the history of medicine.
Canada's health-care system has been largely defined by physicians, hospital administrators, and government bureaucrats. It has been a boon to many, but has meant the entrenchment of allopathic medicine over such alternatives as chiropractic and naturopathy. As Canada's population ages and chronic illnesses proliferate, interventionist and pharmaceutical solutions to health problems become less relevant and extremely costly. Allopathic interventions such as surgery and chemotherapy may increase quantity of life at the expense of its quality.
Clarke uses four different sociological perspectives--structural-functional, conflict, symbolic interactionist, and feminist--to examine occupational diseases, environmental challenges, the inequities of age, gender, class, race, and ethnicity, the experience of getting sick and going to the doctor, and the extensive and profit-motivated impact of the pharmaceutical and medical device industries. Health, Illness, and Medicine in Canada also considers the Canadian health-care system in historical and international context.
Preface
Acknowledgements
Part I: Sociological Perspectives
1. Ways of Thinking Sociologically about Health, Illness, and Medicine
Structural Functionalism
Conflict Theory
Symbolic Interactionist Theory
Feminist Theory
Sociology of Health in Canada
Summary
2. Ways of Studying Health, Illness, and Medicine Sociologically
Positivism
Conflict Theory
Symbolic Interactionism
Feminist Theory/Methodology
Summary
Part II: Sociology of Health and Illness
Introduction
3. Disease and Death: Canada in International and Historical Context
Life Expectancy
Poverty
Food Security
The Physical and Social Environment
Death, Disease, and Disability in Canadian Society
Causes of Death and Disease
Summary
4. Environmental and Occupational Health and Illness
The Major Environmental Issues
Air Pollution and Human Health
The Great Lakes
Waste Disposal
Biodiversity
Occupational Health and Safety
Other Accidents and Violence
Summary
5. Social Inequity, Disease, and Death: Age and Gender
Age and Mortality
Age and Morbidity
Gender and Mortality
Gender and Morbidity
Explanations for Differences in Disease and Death
Summary
6. Social Inequity, Disease, and Death in Canada: Class, Race, and Ethnicity
Social Class
Education
Race, Ethnicity, and Minority Status
Explanations for the Health Effects of Inequities
Economics and Health
Summary
7. Getting Sick and Going to the Doctor
Stress
Social Support
Coronary-Prone or Type A Behaviour and Heart Disease
Sense of Coherence
Religion and Health
Prayer and Health
Therapeutic Touch
The Illness Iceberg
Why People Seek Help
Summary
8. The Experience of Being Ill
Illness, Sickness, and Disease
Variations in the Experience of Being Ill
Popular Conceptions of Health, Illness, and Disease
The Insider's View: How Illness Is Experienced
Case Study: Women and Cancer
Summary
9. The Social Construction of Scientific and Medical Knowledge and Medical Practice
The Sociology of Medical Knowledge
Medical and Scientific Knowledge: Historical and Cross-Cultural Context
Medical Science and Medical Practice: A Gap in Values
Medical Sciences Reinforces Gender Role Stereotypes
The Sociology of Medical Practice
Doctor-Patient Communication
Summary
10. Medicalization: The Medical-Moral Mix
A Brief History of Western Medical Practice
Medicalization: The Critique of Contemporary Medicine
The Contemporary Physician as Moral Entrepreneur
Uncertainty and Medicalization
Medicalization and Demedicalization
Summary
11. Medical Practitioners, Medicare, and the State
Early Canadian Medical Organizations
The Origins of the Contemporary Medical Care System
The Efforts of Early Allopathic Physicians to Organize
The History of Universal Medical Insurance in Canada
The Impact of Medicare on the Health of Canadians
The Impact of Medicare on Health-Care Costs
Summary
12. The Medical Profession
The 'Profession' of Medicine
A Brief History of Medical Education in North America
Medical Education in Canada Today
Organization of the Medical Profession: Autonomy and Social Control
The Management of Mistakes
Summary
13. The Medical Care System: Critical Issues
The Medical Model
Sex and the Medical Hierarchy: A Brief History
Nursing
Women's Health: A New Focus
Women as Hidden Healers
The Medicalization of Women's Lives
Summary
14. Nurses and Midwives in the Changing Health-Care System
Nursing: The Historical Context
Nursing Today: Issues of Sexism, Managerial Ideology, Hospital Organization, and Cutbacks
Nursing as a Profession
Midwifery
Summary
15. Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Alternative, Complementary, and Allopathic Medicine
Chiropractic
Naturopathy
Summary
16. The Medical-Industrial Complex
Drug Use
Physicians and Prescribing
Pharmacists
The Pharmaceutical Industry
Issues in Drug Regulation
Medical Devices and Bioengineering
Summary
Appendix: Web Sites for Sociological Research on Health and Medicine
Bibliography
Index
Juanne Nancarrow Clarke , Professor, Department of Sociology, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada