Title: Chapter 14: Health and Illness
1Chapter 14 Health and Illness
2Why Study Health and Illness?
- Our bodies are social objects
- understand the role that health (and illness)
plays in our lives as social beings. - Health (and illness) are social constructs
- what it means to be healthy or sick is determined
by a society
3Types of Illnesses
- Acute diseases
- sudden onset
- may be briefly incapacitating
- curable or fatal
- Chronic diseases
- develop over a longer period of time
- may not be detected until symptoms occur
4Leading Causes of Death in U.S., 1900-2004
5Epidemiology
- Epidemiology
- Study of disease patterns
- to understand illnesses, how they spread, and how
to treat them - Vector organisms mosquitoes, ticks
- An epidemic
- when a significantly higher than expected number
of cases of a disease occurs within a population - A pandemic
- when a higher than expected number of cases of a
disease spans a large geographic region (multiple
countries or continents)
6Social Construction of Health and Illness
- Medicalization
- Process by which some issues that used to be seen
as personal problems are redefined as medical
issues - DSM and changing definitions of mental disorders
- Other conditions?
- ADHD, alcoholism, pregnancy and child birth,
death
7Approaches to Medical Treatment
- Curative or crisis medicine
- healthcare that treats a problem after it has
already started - Preventative medicine
- health care that tries to prevent or delay a
problem - can include making lifestyle changes
- Palliative care
- health care that focuses on symptom and pain
relief - not intended to provide a cure
- typically used for critically ill or dying
patients.
8Issues in Medicine and Health Care
- What other options are there?
- Complementary medicine
- treatments, practices, or products that can be
used with conventional Western medicine - Alternative medicine
- treatments, practices, or products that can be
used instead of conventional Western medicine - Integrative medicine
- combines conventional medicine with
complementary practices that are proven to be
safe and effective
9Issues in Medicine and Health Care (contd)
- Health Care Reform
- Issue in culture wars
- Based on premise that we need to provide better,
more affordable health care to all - The Affordable Care Act 2010 (Obama-care)
- Eliminates rescission
- a policy that allows insurance companies to
cancel a persons coverage after they get sick - Problems
- Who pays for this?
- Is it ethical to require people to buy insurance
or take care of themselves?
10Social Inequality, Health, and Illness
- Socioeconomic status (SES)
- Access to heath care, tests and medications, and
nutrition - Food deserts
- poor, urban areas without grocery stores
- difficulty in finding healthy food options
- Higher SES individuals often live longer and feel
better than those with lower SES - Race and gender
- Minorities and women are more likely to be poor
- Minorities are more likely to be exposed to
harmful environment - Men are more likely to hold hazardous jobs
- Deprivation amplification
- When the risks we already have (because of
background or heredity) are amplified by social
factors
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12Medicine as a Social Institution
- The American Medical Association (AMA)
- transmits norms and values of medicine and
medical knowledge - regulates, licenses, and legitimizes
practitioners - polices itself and encroachment on its power
13Medicine as a Social Institution (contd)
- Doctor-patient relations
- Influenced by the structure of the institution
- The way we interact with doctors gives them
status and power - Cultural competence
- Consideration of a persons cultural background
as part of the treatment process - a patients beliefs will shape their approach to
health care
14Medicine as a Social Institution (contd)
- The sick role
- Being sick as a form of deviance (different from
the norm) - Talcott Parsons (Functionalist)
- Actions and attitudes expected from someone who
is sick - Excused from normal responsibilities
- Imposes new responsibilities
- like seeking treatment and trying to get better
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16Issues in Medicine and Health Care (contd)
- Eugenics
- an attempt to manipulate the gene pool
- to eliminate disorders
- to improve humans through medical science
- Bioethics
- the moral or ethical issues related to scientific
or medical advancements
17Why Study Health and Illness?
- Understanding the link between social structures
and the individual helps us understand processes
and health outcomes - Thinking about our values and cultural context
helps us understand the way people perceive the
health of individuals, society, and the planet