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Second Opinion

An Introduction to Health Sociology

Sixth Edition

Edited by John Germov

$117.95 AUD

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ISBN:
9780190306489
Published:
26 Sep 2018
Availability:
81

Second Opinion: An Introduction to Health Sociology, sixth edition, is the leading health sociology textbook for Australian students. Accompanied by comprehensive online resources with innovative teaching and learning materials, this outstanding teaching text introduces students to the theories, concepts, issues and contexts of health sociology.

NEW TO THIS EDITION

  • New chapters: 11 – Young People’s Health; 12 – The Social Determinants of Obesity; 18 – Health and Medical Technology
  • Chapter introductory vignettes encourage a sociologically reflexive approach
  • Doing Health Sociology boxes link theory to practice as well as highlight sociological research and theories for informing health care practice, health policy, and public understanding of the social origins of health and illness
  • Pause and Reflect questions have been integrated to assist in students’ understanding of the content
  • Up-to-date documentaries and films that relate to chapter themes.

PART 1: HEALTH SOCIOLOGY AND THE SOCIAL MODEL OF HEALTH

1. Imagining Health Problems as Social Issues
John Germov
2. Theorising Health: Major Theoretical Perspectives in Health Sociology
John Germov
3. Well-being and Wellness
Daniela Heil

PART 2: THE SOCIAL PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF HEALTH AND ILLNESS

4. Global Public Health
Alex Broom, Katherine Kenny, and John Germov
5. The Class Origins of Health Inequality
John Germov
6. Workplace Health
Toni Schofield and John Germov
7. Gendered Health
Dorothy Broom, Maria Freij, and John Germov
8. Indigenous Health: The Slow Road to Equity
Dennis Gray, Sherry Saggers, and Annalee Stearne
9. Ethnicity, Health, and Multiculturalism
Roberta Julian
10. Rural Health
Clarissa Hughes
11. Young People’s Health
Julia Coffey

PART 3: THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF HEALTH AND ILLNESS

12. The Social Determinants of Obesity
Lauren Williams and John Germov
13. The Medicalisation of Deviance
Sharyn L. Roach Anleu
14. Mental Illness: Understandings, Experience, and Service Provision
Anne-Maree Sawyer
15. The Illness Experience: Lay Perspectives, Disability, and Chronic Illness
Daphne Habibis
16. Drug Use and Abuse in Australia: Social Origins, Impacts, and Responses
Maria Freij and John Germov
17. Ageing, Health, and the Demographic Revolution
Marilyn Poole
18. Health and Medical Technology
Caragh Brosnan and Alex Dumas
19. Media and Health: Moral Panics, Miracles, and Medicalisation
John Germov and Maria Freij

PART 4: THE SOCIAL ORGANISATION OF HEALTH CARE: PROFESSIONS, POLITICS AND POLICIES

20. Power, Politics, and Health Care
John Germov and Helen Belcher
21. Challenges to Medical Dominance
John Germov
22. The Sociology of Nursing
Helen Keleher and Melissa-Jane Belle
23. The Sociology of Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Alex Broom and Katherine Kenny
24. The Sociology of Allied Health
Lauren Williams and Tanya Lawlis
25. A Sociology of Health Promotion
John Germov, Maria Freij, and Katy Richmond

Appendix: Tips on Planning, Writing, and Referencing Health Sociology Essays
Glossary
Index

John Germov – Provost and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), Charles Sturt University.

John Germov (PhD) is Professor of Sociology and Pro Vice-Chancellor of the Faculty of Education and Arts at the University of Newcastle (Australia). He is the President of the Australasian Council of Deans of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (DASSH), the peak national body on research and teaching in humanities and social sciences. John is a former President of the Australian Sociological Association and served on the Executive of the International Sociological Association.

Lecturer Resources are available for lecturers prescribing Second Opinion: An Introduction to Health Sociology, sixth edition, for their course:

  • Instructor’s Resource Manual
  • Test bank of multiple choice questions
  • Image bank.

Read a sample chapter from Second Opinion:

Chapter 1: Imagining Health Problems as Social Issues