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HEALTH (ILLNESS AND MEDICINE) AND SOCIETY

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Arial Calibri Office Theme HEALTH (ILLNESS AND MEDICINE) AND SOCIETY Medicine as a Cultural System Medicine as a Social System Sociology of health: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HEALTH (ILLNESS AND MEDICINE) AND SOCIETY


1
HEALTH (ILLNESS AND MEDICINE)AND SOCIETY
2
Medicine as a Cultural System
  • all human groups develop some set of beliefs,
    patterns of thought, perceptions consistent with
    their cultural systems for defining
    conceptualizing disease
  • all societies have medical practices and beliefs
    based on theories of diseases disease causation
    with an internal logic of their own, and should
    not be dismissed as bizarre, esoteric, illogical,
    irrational bits and pieces of belief practice
    in exotic cultures

3
Medicine as a Social System
  • all human groups develop methods allocate roles
    congruent with their resources structures for
    coping with or responding to disease
  • norms governing choices and evaluations of
    treatment - the types of treatment they believe
    in, and to whom they turn if they do become ill
  • social statuses, roles, power relationships
  • patients healers - basic components of health
    care system
  • embedded in specific configurations of cultural
    meaning and other social relationships
  • interaction settings - clinic, hospital, with
    healer, family, society-at-large
  • institutions related to health and healing

4
Sociology of health medicine
  • Focus on medicine
  • Social aspects of medicine, health, disease
  • Social factors shaping medicine
  • Social structure
  • Social labelling social control
  • Sick role
  • Patient-doctor relationship
  • Disease-illness distinction
  • Medicalization

5
The social production of health
  • Shift from disease focus of medicine
  • Shift from focus on medicine
  • Same emphasis on power, inequality, social
    relationships/organization/structure
  • Social characteristics play a predominant role in
    determining sickness and health status
  • Occupation related to health
  • Social position class, ethnicity, gender, age
  • disease feelings of sickness not determined
    solely by underlying biology

6
Society and health
  • Social relations of sickness which produce forms
    and distributions of sickness in society
  • Sickness is the process through which worrisome
    behavioral and biological signs, particularly
    ones originating with disease, are given socially
    recognizable meanings resulting in socially
    significant outcomes
  • Sickness is a process for socializing disease and
    illness
  • The social order is embedded in medical beliefs

7
Society and health
  • choices forms of medical interventions
    transactions are determined by sickness (not
    illness or disease)
  • Medicine continues to divorce disease from its
    social relations of production
  • Ignoring power differentials that originate and
    reside in arrangements between social groups and
    classes
  • Symbols of healing are equated with power
  • Medicine is an ideological practice

8
SOCIAL FORCES AND PROCESSES EMBODIED AS
BIOLOGICAL EVENTSTHE CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE
  • Paul Farmer
  • Inequality itself constitutes our modern plague
    inequality is a pathogenic force
  • Social inequalities often determine both the
    distribution of modern plagues and clinical
    outcomes among the afflicted

9
Critical Theory, Social Structure, Medicine
  • Questions about the neutrality/objectivity of
    medicine, use of technology, science
  • Ideology -- a system of shared beliefs that
    legitimize particular behavioral norms values
    at the same time they claim appear to be based
    on empirical truths
  • ideologies transform power (potential influence)
    into authority (legitimate control)

10
Life Expectancy Ethnicity in the US
11
Canada, Health, Inequalities
12
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13
Non-Medical Determinants of Health
  • In First Nations communities only 56.9 of homes
    were considered adequate in 1999--00.
  • 33.6 of First Nations communities had at least
    90 of their homes connected to a community
    sewage disposal system.
  • In 1999, 65 First Nations and Inuit communities
    were under a boil water advisory for varying
    lengths of time--an average of 183 days of boil
    water advisories per affected community.
  • Many communicable diseases such as giardiasis and
    shigellosis (both acute infectious diseases
    characterized by diarrhea, fever and nausea) can
    be traced to poor water quality

14
Cultural Capital Health
15
World-Wide Health Inequalities
16
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20
WORLD SYSTEMS
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World Systems (I. Wallerstein)
  • A world-system is a social system
  • one that has boundaries, structures, member
    groups, rules of legitimation, and coherence.
  • made up of the conflicting forces which hold it
    together by tension and tear it apart as each
    group seeks eternally to remold it to its
    advantage.
  • a life-span over which its characteristics change
    in some respects and remain stable in others.
  • its structures -- at different times strong or
    weak in terms of the internal logic of its
    functioning.

23
Health and society
  • Relational
  • comparing the health status of different
    population groups within
  • social, economic and environmental conditions and
    marked disparities among population groups
  • To see health in its social context is to look
    beyond the limits of medicine as we know it, to a
    much wider set of questions that engage social,
    cultural, political and moral aspects of human
    experience
  • the ways in which globalizing economies shape
    both illness and health care
  • the role played by social forces and cultural
    change in shaping individual well-being.
  • Process meaning and action
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