Title: Health, Medicine, Disability and Aging
1Chapter 14
- Health, Medicine, Disability and Aging
2Chapter Outline
- Health and Medicine
- Defining and Measuring Health
- Health and Politics The United States in
Comparative Perspective - Disability
- Aging
- Theories of Age Stratification
- Social Problems of Elderly people
3The Black Death
- In 1346, rumors reached Europe of a plague
sweeping the East. - The epidemic spread along trade routes to China
and Russia. - Within 2 years, the Black Death, killed 1/3 of
Europes population. - The plague still ranks as the most devastating
catastrophe in human history.
4Sociological Issues of Health, Medicine, and
Disability
- Health risks are always unevenly distributed.
- Health problems change over time.
- Medical professions have gained substantial
control over health issues and promoted their own
approach to well-being.
5Leading Causes of Death, United States, 1900
Cause of Deaths
1. Pneumonia/influenza 11.8
2. Tuberculosis 11.3
3. Diarrhea/other intestinal 8.3
4. Heart disease 8.0
5. Stroke 6.2
6Leading Causes of Death, United States, 1900
Cause of Deaths
6. Kidney disease 5.2
7. Accidents 4.2
8.Cancer 3.7
9. Senility 2.9
10. Bronchitis 2.3
7Leading Causes of Death, United States, 2001
Cause of Deaths
1. Heart disease 28.9
2. Cancer 22.9
3. Stroke 6.8
4. Chronic lung disease 5.1
5. Accidents 4.0
8Leading Causes of Death, United States, 2001
Cause of Deaths
6. Diabetes 2.9
7. Pneumonia/influenza 2.6
8. Alzheimer disease 2.2
9. Kidney disease 1.6
10. Blood poisoning 1.3
9Leading Causes of Death, United States, 2001
Cause of Deaths
11. Suicide 1.2
12. Liver diseases 1.1
13. Homicide 0.8
14. High blood pressure 0.8
15. Lung inflammation 0.7
10Life Expectancy, Selected Countries
11Life Expectancy
- Maximum average human life span - average age of
death for an entire population under ideal
conditions. - Life expectancy - average number of years a
person can actually expect to live.
12Social Causes of Illness and Death
- Human-environmental factors - Cancer causing
pollutants in the air and water. - Lifestyle factors - cigarettes, alcohol, drugs,
diet, social isolation - Public health and health-care systems - access to
clean water, basic sewage, immunizations
13Number of People with HIV/AIDS, 12/31/02
14Health Indicators 19992002
United States Japan Canada Zambia
Physicians/100K pop. 279 193.2 229.1 6.9
Nurses/ 100K pop. 972 744.9 897.1 113.1
Childrenimmunizedagainst measles 92 94 96 90
15Reasons for Health Inequity
- The poor are more likely to be exposed to
violence, high-risk behavior and environmental
hazards. - The poor cannot afford adequate health care.
16Leading Causes of Death Ratios, 2000
FemaleMale African AmericanWhite
Heart disease 1.02 0.90
Cancer 0.90 0.94
Stroke 1.53 0.96
Lung disease 1.00 0.50
Accidents 0.52 1.08
17Polling Question
- Do you currently smoke cigarettes?
- Yes
- No
18Gender Inequalities in Health Care
- More research has focused on mens diseases
(cardiac arrest) than on womens diseases
(breast cancer). - Women undergo fewer kidney transplants, various
cardiac procedures, and other treatments than men.
19Gender Inequalities in Health Care
- Women live longer than men and experience greater
lifetime risk of functional disability and
chronic illness and have a greater need for
long-term care. - There are 40 more poor women than poor men in
the United States.
20Prescription Drug Costs in 8 Rich Countries, 2002
21Problems with HMOs
- Some HMOs avoid covering sick people and people
who are likely to get sick to keep costs down. - Minimize the cost of treating sick people they
cant avoid covering. - Inflate diagnoses to maximize reimbursements.
- Keep overhead charges high.
22Administrative Costs as of Health-Care Spending
23HMOs Improve the Quality of Care, 1998
24Recent Challenges to Traditional Medical Science
- Patient Activism
- Alternative Medicine - chiropractic therapy,
acupuncture, massage therapy, and various
relaxation techniques - Holistic Medicine - emphasizes disease prevention
25Social Construction of Disability
- 400 years ago - Catholic Church declared
left-handed people servants of the Devil and
burned them at the stake. - 19th century - Western scientists and reformers
sought rehabilitation of the disabled.
26Social Construction of Disability
- 1933 - Nazis engineered the sterilization and
killing of the mentally deficient and the
physically deviant, including the blind and the
deaf. - 1920s to 1970s - In America Native American
women were subjected to federally funded forced
sterilization.
27Ablism
- Prejudice and discrimination against disabled
people. - Historical example Belief among 19th-century
Western educators that blind people were
incapable of high-level or abstract thought. - Ablism involves the largely unintended neglect of
the conditions of disabled people.
28Age Stratification
- Sociologists call a category of people born in
the same range of years an age cohort. - Age stratification refers to social inequality
between age cohorts. - Gerontocracies were societies in which elderly
men ruled.
29Child Poverty by Race and Ethnicity
30Median Income and Percent Poor
31Age Stratification Functionalist Theory
- Age stratification reflects the importance of
each age cohorts contribution to society. - In preindustrial societies, the elderly were
important for knowledge and wisdom. - With industrialization, function of the elderly
became less important and their status declined.
32Age StratificationConflict Theory
- Age stratification stems from competition and
conflict. - Young people may participate in a revolutionary
overthrow and seize power. - The elderly may organize politically to decrease
disadvantages and increase advantages in life.
33Age Stratification Symbolic Interactionist
- Focus on the meanings people attach to age-based
groups and age stratification. - One study examined movies from 1940-1980.
- Young people were portrayed as leading active,
vital lives. - Elderly women were portrayed as unattractive,
unfriendly, and unintelligent.
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36Elderly as of U.S. Population, 19002050
37Polling Question
- The government should pay for all prescription
medication for the elderly in our society. - Strongly agree
- Agree somewhat
- Unsure
- Disagree somewhat
- Strongly disagree
38A Shortage of Caregivers
- In 2001, home-care agencies and nursing homes
employed 2.1 million caregivers in the United
States. - The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics expects a 58
rise in demand for such workers between 1998 and
2008.
39A Shortage of Caregivers
- Workers are hard to find and hard to keep
- The work is difficult and pays little.
- Government requires 2 weeks of preemployment
training for direct-care aides but Congresss
1996 welfare reform discourages such training for
former welfare recipients.
40Ageism
- Ageism is prejudice and discrimination based on
age. - Examples
- Elderly men are stereotyped as grumpy and
elderly women as haggard.
41Euthanasia
- Involves a doctor prescribing or administering
medication or treatment that intended to end a
terminally ill patients life. - Public opinion polls show about 2/3 of Americans
favor physician-assisted euthanasia.
42Euthanasia
- Between 33 and 60 of American doctors say they
would be willing to perform euthanasia if it were
legal. - Nearly 30 of American doctors have received a
euthanasia request, but only 6 say they complied.
43Elderly and Poverty
- Among the elderly, poverty is most common for
- those 85 and older
- Women
- African Americans
- people living alone
- people living in rural areas.
44People Who Died under Oregons Death with Dignity
Act
Physician-Assisted Suicide Other Deaths
Average Age Average Age 69 74
Race White 97 97
Asian 3 1
Other 0 2
Sex Male 55 50
Female 45 50
45People Who Died under Oregons Death with
Dignity Act
Marital Status Physician-Assisted Suicide Other Deaths
Married 47 49
Widowed 22 33
Divorced 25 14
Never Married 6 4
46Quick Quiz
47- 1. Life expectancy is
- the average age at death of the members of a
population - the maximum human life span
- the maximum average human life span
- the mortality rate
- the fertility rate
48Answer a
- Life expectancy is the average age at death of
the members of a population.
49 - 2. Which of the following is not a major social
cause of illness and death? - human-environmental factors
- lifestyle factors
- factors related to the public health system
- factors related to the health care system
- none of these choices (that is, all the factors
listed above are major social causes of illness
and death)
50Answer e
- All the factors listed below are major social
causes of illness and death - human-environmental factors
- lifestyle factors
- factors related to the public health system
- factors related to the health care system
51- 3. What strategies do health maintenance
organizations (HMOs) use to maximize profits? - They avoid covering sick people and people who
are likely to get sick. - Their doctor-compensation formulas reward doctors
for withholding treatments that are unprofitable. - They keep overhead charges high.
- All of these choices.
52Answer d
- Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) use the
following strategies to maximize profits - They avoid covering sick people and people who
are likely to get sick. - Their doctor-compensation formulas reward doctors
for withholding treatments that are unprofitable. - They keep overhead charges high.
53- 4. Disabled people are incapable of performing
within the range of "normal" human activity. - True
- False
54Answer a
- Disabled people are incapable of performing
within the range of "normal" human activity.
55- 5. Ablism involves
- curing disabilities to the extent possible
through medical and technological intervention - prejudice and discrimination against disabled
people - the largely unintended neglect of the conditions
of disabled people - prejudice and discrimination against disabled
people, and the largely unintended neglect of the
conditions of disabled people
56Answer d
- Ablism involves prejudice and discrimination
against disabled people, and the largely
unintended neglect of the conditions of disabled
people.
57- 6. Which of the following theories explains age
stratification in terms of competition for power
and wealth between age cohorts? - functionalist theory
- conflict theory
- symbolic interactionism
- essentialist theory
- postmodern theory
58Answer b
- Conflict theory explains age stratification in
terms of competition for power and wealth between
age cohorts.
59- 7. _________________ is prejudice and
discrimination against elderly people.
60Answer ageism
- Ageism is prejudice and discrimination against
elderly people.
61- 8. _________________ involves a doctor
prescribing or administering medication or
treatment that is intended to end a terminally
ill patient's life.
62Answer euthanasia
- Euthanasia involves a doctor prescribing or
administering medication or treatment that is
intended to end a terminally ill patient's life.
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