Title: Illness and the Health Care Crisis
1Chapter 2
- Illness and the Health Care Crisis
2Chapter Outline
- The Global Context Effects of Globalization on
Heath - Societal Measures of Health and Illness
- Sociological Theories of Illness and Health Care
- HIV/AIDS A Global Health Concern
- The Growing Problem of Obesity
- Mental Illness The Hidden Epidemic
3Chapter Outline
- Life style Behaviors and Social Factors
Associated with Health and Illness - Problems in U.S. Health Care
- Strategies for Action Improving Health and
Health Care - Understanding Illness and the Health Care Crisis
4Globalization
- Economic, political, and social
interconnectedness among societies throughout the
world. - Positive Effects on Health
- Allows monitoring of diseases and sharing
guidelines for controlling disease. - Provides opportunities for establishing
international health programs and agreements. - Negative Effects on Health
- Increased tourism encourages the spread of
diseases.
5Measures of Longevity and Mortality by Region
2003
6Measures of Longevity and Mortality by Region
2003
7Morbidity
- Illnesses, symptoms, and the impairments they
produce. - Measures of morbidity are often expressed in
terms of incidence and prevalence. - Incidence - Number of new cases of a specific
health problem. - Prevalence - Total number of cases of a specific
health problem.
8Life Expectancy
- Average number of years individuals born in a
given year can expect to live. - Infant mortality - Number of deaths of live-born
infants under 1 year of age.
9Top Three Causes of Death by Age Group United
States, 2003
10Top Three Causes of Death by Age Group United
States, 2003
11Leading Causes of Death in theUnited States
2003.
12Childbirth Assistance and Lifetime Chance of
Maternal Mortality
13Epidemiological Transition
- The shift from a society characterized by low
life expectancy and parasitic and infectious
diseases to one characterized by high life
expectancy and chronic and degenerative diseases. - Epidemiologists study the social origins and
distribution of health problems in a population
and how patterns of health and disease vary
between and within societies.
14Patterns of Burden of Disease
- The overall burden of disease on a population
through a unit of measurement that combines the
number of deaths and the impact of premature
death and disability on a population. - The unit of measurement, the disability-adjusted
life year (DALY), reflects years lost to
premature death and years lived with a
disability. - 1 DALY is equal to 1 lost year of healthy life.
- Worldwide, tobacco is the leading cause of burden
of disease.
15Patterns of Burden of Disease
- Top 10 risk factors that contribute to the global
burden of disease
- Underweight
- unsafe sex
- high blood pressure
- Tobacco
- Alcohol
- unsafe water and sanitation
- Hygiene
- High cholesterol
- indoor smoke from solid fuels
- iron deficiency
- overweight
16Structural-Functionalist Perspective
- Health care functions to maintain well-being of
individuals and society. - High cost of medical care is necessary to entice
people into medical profession. - HIV/AIDS helped unite and mobilize gay rights
activists.
17Conflict Perspective
- Focuses on how wealth, status, and power
influence illness and health care. - Lack of status and power affects the health of
women in many societies.
18Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
- Focuses on
- how meanings, definitions, and labels influence
health, illness, and health care and - how such meanings are learned through interaction
with others and through media messages and
portrayals.
19Medicalization
- Defining or labeling behaviors and conditions as
medical problems. - The concept of medicalization includes
- any new phenomena defined as medical problems in
need of medical intervention - post-traumatic stress disorder,
attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder - normal conditions that have come to be defined
as medical problems - childbirth, menopause, and death.
20Stigma
- Any personal characteristic associated with
social disgrace, rejection, or discrediting. - Symbolic interactionists focus on stigmatizing
effects of being labeled ill. - Individuals with mental illnesses, drug
addictions, physical deformities and impairments,
and HIV and AIDS are prone to being stigmatized.
21HIV/AIDS A Global Health Concern
- HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death among
adults ages 1559 years worldwide. - HIV/AIDS has killed more than 20 million people,
and in 2004 nearly 40 million people worldwide
were living with HIV infection.
22HIV/AIDS A Global Health Concern
- HIV is transmitted through
- sexual intercourse
- sharing unclean intravenous needles
- perinatal transmission
- blood transfusions or blood products
- breast milk (rarely)
- Worldwide, the predominant mode of HIV
transmission is through heterosexual contact.
23Question
- How many sex partners have you had in the last 12
months? - None
- One
- Two or more
24GSS National Data
25HIV/AIDS in Africa and Other Regions
- In 2003 Africa was home to 2/3 of the worlds
people living with HIV/AIDS. - About 1 in 12 African adults has HIV/AIDS, and as
many as 9 out of 10 HIV-infected people in
sub-Saharan Africa do not know they are infected.
26HIV/AIDS in Africa and Other Regions
- The second highest HIV prevalence rate is the
Caribbean, where 23 of adults are infected with
HIV. - AIDS deaths have left 14 million orphans in the
world, and by 2010 a projected 25 million
children will be orphaned by HIV/AIDS.
27HIV/AIDS in the United States
- An estimated 850,000 to 950,000 U.S. residents
are infected with HIV, about 1/4 of whom are
unaware of their infection. - 70 of new HIV infections in the U.S. each year
are among men and half are in people younger than
25.
28HIV/AIDS in the United States
- Of new infections among men
- 60 were infected through heterosexual sex
- 25 through injection drug use
- 15 through heterosexual sex.
- Of new infections among women
- 75 were infected through heterosexual sex
- 25 through injection drug use.
29HIV/AIDS in the United States
- In a study of 5 U.S. cities, 25 of men who have
sex with men were infected with HIV. - 48 of these men were not aware they were
infected. - In 2003 African Americans accounted for 42 of
all people in the U.S. living with HIV/AIDS. - In 2001 HIV/AIDS was the number one cause of
death for African American women ages 2534.
30Question
- What is the predominant mode of HIV transmission
worldwide? - heterosexual contact
- perinatal transmission
- homosexual contact
- intravenous drug use
31Answer A
- Heterosexual contact is the predominant mode of
HIV transmission worldwide.
32The Growing Problem of Obesity
- Obesity is the second biggest cause of
preventable deaths in the United. - In 2005 a report published in the New England
Journal of Medicine suggested that over the next
50 years obesity will shorten the average U.S.
life expectancy of 77.6 years by at least 2 to 5
years
33The Growing Problem of Obesity
- 64 of U.S. adults are overweight or obese.
- 1/4 of U.S. adults age 20 or older are obese.
- The percentage of U.S. adults who are obese
increased from 19.4 in 1997 to 24.5 in 2004. - Among youth ages 619, 16 are overweight.
- The percentage of children and adolescents who
are overweight has more than doubled since 1970.
34Mental Illness The Hidden Epidemic
- Mental illness refers collectively to all mental
disorders, which are health conditions that are
characterized by alterations in thinking, mood,
and/or behavior associated with distress and/or
impaired functioning and that meet specific
criteria. - Mental illness is a hidden epidemic because the
shame and embarrassment associated with mental
problems discourage people from acknowledging and
talking about them.
35Extent and Impact of Mental Illness
- One study found a 40 lifetime prevalence of any
mental disorder in the Netherlands and the United
States, a 12 lifetime prevalence in Turkey, and
a 20 lifetime prevalence in Mexico. - Annually, about 21 U.S. adults experience mental
illness, and more than 14 of school-age children
have mental health problems.
36Extent and Impact of Mental Illness
- Untreated mental disorders can lead to
- poor educational achievement
- lost productivity
- unsuccessful relationships
- significant distress
- violence and abuse
- incarceration
- poverty
37Extent and Impact of Mental Illness
- On any given day 150,000 people with severe
mental illness are homeless, living on the
streets or in public shelters. - As many as 1 in 5 adults in U.S. prisons and as
many as 70 of youth incarcerated in juvenile
justice facilities are mentally ill.
38Social Class and Poverty
- Poverty is associated with malnutrition, indoor
air pollution, hazardous working conditions, lack
of access to medical care, and unsafe water and
sanitation . - The percentage of Americans reporting fair or
poor health is more than three times as high for
people living below the poverty line as for those
with family income at least twice the poverty
threshold.
39Poverty and Health
- People living below the U.S. poverty line are
three times as likely to have serious
psychological distress. - Social selection - mentally ill individuals
have difficulty achieving educational and
occupational success and drift to the lower
class. - Social causation - lower-class individuals
experience greater stress and this stress can
reach the point where the individual can no
longer cope with daily living.
40Education and Health
- Individuals with low levels of education are more
likely to engage in health-risk behaviors. - Women with less education are less likely to seek
prenatal care and are more likely to smoke during
pregnancy. - A national survey in India found that only 18 of
illiterate women had heard of AIDS, compared to
92 of women who had completed high school.
41Family and Household Factors
- A study of adults in their 50s found that married
people who live only with their spouse or with
spouse and children had the best physical and
mental health. - Single women living with children had the lowest
measures of health. - Better health among married individuals results
from the economic advantages of marriage and from
the emotional support provided by most marriages.
42Gender and Health
- Gender discrimination and violence against women
produce adverse health effects in girls and women
worldwide. - Violence against women is a major public health
concern - At least one in three women has been beaten,
coerced into sex, or abused in some way. - Sexual violence and gender inequality contribute
to growing rates of HIV among girls and women.
43Life Expectancy in the United States by Race and
Sex
44Question
- Do you have any health insurance, including
Medicare or Medicaid? - Yes
- No
45GSS National Data
46U.S. Health Care
- In the United States, health care is offered
through various private and public means. - In 200
- 27 of Americans were covered by government
health insurance plans (Medicare, Medicaid, and
military insurance) - 68 were covered by private insurance, most often
employment-based
47Health maintenance organizations (HMOs)
- Prepaid group plans in which a person pays a
monthly premium for comprehensive health care
services. - HMOs attempt to minimize hospitalization costs by
emphasizing preventive health care.
48Preferred provider organizations (PPOs)
- Health care organizations in which employers who
purchase group health insurance agree to send
their employees to certain health care providers
or hospitals in return for cost discounts. - Health care providers obtain more patients but
charge lower fees to buyers of group insurance.
49Managed Care
- Any medical insurance plan that controls costs
through monitoring and controlling the decisions
of health care providers. - Doctors must call a utilization review office to
receive approval before they can hospitalize a
patient, perform surgery, or order an expensive
diagnostic test.
50Question
- Medical and health insurance premiums should not
be based on age of the recipient. - Strongly agree
- Agree somewhat
- Unsure
- Disagree somewhat
- Strongly disagree
51Medicare
- Medicare is funded by the federal government and
reimburses the elderly and the disabled for their
health care. - Medicares medical insurance program is not free
enrollees must pay a monthly premium as well as a
copayment for services. - Medicare does not cover long-term nursing home
care, dental care, eyeglasses, and other types of
services.
52Medicaid
- Provides health care coverage for the poor, and
is jointly funded by the federal and state
governments. - Medicaid does not cover all poor people.
- Eligibility rules and benefits vary from state to
state, and in many states Medicaid provides
health care only for the very poor who are well
below the federal poverty level.
53Question
- The type of health insurance plan that tries to
minimize hospitalization costs by emphasizing
preventable health care is called what? - Medicare
- a preferred provider organization
- a health maintenance organization
- Medicaid
54Answer C
- The type of health insurance plan that tries to
minimize hospitalization costs by emphasizing
preventable health care is called a health
maintenance organization.
55SCHIP
- In 1997 the State Childrens Health Insurance
Program (SCHIP) was created to expand health
coverage to uninsured children, many of whom come
from families with incomes too high to qualify
for Medicaid but too low to afford private health
insurance. - States receive matching federal funds to provide
medical insurance to uninsured children.
56Barriers to Health Care byInsurance Status, 2003
57Improving Health and Health Care
- Two approaches
- Selective primary health care uses technocratic
solutions to target a specific health problem,
such as using immunization and oral rehydration
therapy to promote child survival. - Comprehensive primary health care focuses on the
broader social determinants of health, such as
poverty and economic inequality, gender
inequality, environment, and community
development.
58U.S. Health Care Reform
- The U.S. is the only country in the
industrialized world that does not guarantee
health care to its citizens.
59Socialized Medicine
- In all systems of socialized medicine the
government - directly controls the financing and organization
of health services, - directly pays providers
- owns most of the medical facilities
- guarantees equal access to health care
- allows private care for individuals who are
willing to pay for their medical expenses
60Quick Quiz
61- 1. How does symbolic interactionism view health
conditions such as mental illness? - As society's failure to meet the needs of the
have-nots. - As a biological condition.
- As a result of globalization.
- As a label conferred on those who are different.
62Answer D
- Symbolic interactionism views health conditions
such as mental illness as a label conferred on
those who are different.
63- 2. Medicalization refers to the trend in
- the increase in the number of new viruses that
are found. - treating mental illness in hospitals.
- turning normal events into medical events.
- the growing hospitalization of HMO patients.
64Answer C
- Medicalization refers to the trend in turning
normal events into medical events.
65- 3. In developing countries, what is the leading
cause of death and disability for women ages 15
to 49? - malnutrition and starvation
- sexually transmitted diseases
- maternal mortality
- tobacco related deaths
66Answer C
- In developing countries, the leading cause of
death and disability for women ages 15 to 49 is
maternal mortality.
67- 4. Which of the following is a new approach to
measuring the health status of a population? - patterns of burdens of disease
- infant mortality rates
- maternal mortality rates
- under 5 mortality rates
68Answer A
- Patterns of burdens of disease is a new approach
to measuring the health status of a population.