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Health and Medicine

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Title: Health and Medicine


1
Health and Medicine
2
Health
  • A state of complete physical, mental, and social
    well-being (World Health Organization)
  • Health is as much a social as a biological issue
    for sociologists
  • Illness have their roots in the organization of
    society

3
Society Shapes the Health of Peoplein 5 Major
Ways
  1. Cultural patterns define health
  2. What is considered healthy is what people hold
    to be morally good
  3. Cultural standards of health change over time
  4. A societys technology affects peoples health
  5. Social inequality relates to health

4
Health a Global Survey
  • Health in history
  • Industrialization changed the patterns of health,
    medical care
  • Health in low-income countries
  • One billion people (globally) have serious
    illness due to severe poverty
  • Poor sanitation, malnutrition and minimal medical
    care
  • Health in high-income countries
  • Infectious disease is less of a threat,
    concentrate on chronic illnesses

5
Global Map 21-1 The Availability of Physicians
in Global Perspective
6
Leading Causes of Death U.S.A.
  • 1900
  • Influenza and pneumonia
  • Tuberculosis
  • Stomach/intestinal diseases
  • Heart disease
  • Cerebral hemorrhage
  • Kidney disease
  • Accidents
  • Cancer
  • Disease of infancy
  • Diphtheria
  • 2000
  • Heart disease
  • Cancer
  • Stroke
  • Lung disease (non-cancerous)
  • Accidents
  • Diabetes
  • Pneumonia and influenza
  • Alzheimers disease
  • Kidney disease
  • Blood disease

7
Who Is Healthy?
  • Social epidemiology how health and disease are
    distributed throughout a societys population
  • Factors include
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Social class
  • Race

8
National Map 21-1 Quality of Health across the
United States
9
Age Gender
  • Death is now rare among young people
  • Accidents and aids are two exceptions
  • Across the life course, women fare better than
    men
  • Men have higher death rates for accidents,
    suicide and violence
  • Our cultural conception of masculinity pressures
    men
  • Coronary prone behavior

10
Class and Race
  • Infant mortality rates are twice as high for poor
    as for wealthy
  • The poorest in America can die from diseases that
    strike children in countries like the Vietnam and
    Lebanon
  • African Americans are three times more likely to
    be poor compared to whites
  • Poverty condemns people to live in crowed
    unsanitary conditions that breed infectious
    disease
  • Life expectance for white children born in 2000
    is six years greater than for African Americans
  • Poverty also breeds stress and violence
  • In 1999, 2,674 African American males were killed
    by others of their own race

11
Cigarette Smoking
  • Most preventable hazard to health
  • By 1999, 24 of Americans smoke
  • Generally speaking divorced, separated,
    unemployed, in the military less schooling a
    person has tend to be smokers
  • 430,000 men women die prematurely each year as
    a direct result of smoking
  • That number exceeds the combined death toll from
    alcohol, cocaine, heroin, homicide, suicide, auto
    accidents aids

12
Eating Disorders
  • An intense form of dieting or other unhealthy
    methods of weight control driven by the desire to
    be very thin
  • 95 of those suffering from anorexia and bulimia
    are women, white and affluent
  • The beauty myth tells women to exaggerate the
    importance of physical attractiveness to the
    point of risking their health
  • Pressures come from society, parents, the media,
    as well as women themselves

13
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
  • Sexual revolution of the 1960s saw a rise in
    std rates Generated a sexual counter-revolution
  • Gonorrhea syphilis
  • Easily treated with antibiotics
  • Genital herpes
  • Treatable but incurable
  • Aids acquired immune deficiency syndrome
  • Caused by human immunodeficiency virus HIV
  • Incurable, almost always fatal
  • Specific behaviors increase risk anal sex,
    sharing needles and drug use

14
Figure 21-1 Life Expectancy for U.S. Children
Born in 2000
15
Ethics Death
  • When is a person dead?
  • When an irreversible state involving no response
    to stimulation, no movement or breathing, no
    reflexes, and no indication of brain activity
  • Do people have the right to die?
  • 10,000 people in the u.S.A. Are in a permanent
    vegetative state
  • What about mercy killing?
  • Thousands face terminal illnesses that will cause
    horrible suffering
  • Right to die a person with an incurable disease
    has a right to forgo treatment which may prolong
    their life
  • Active euthanasia a person may enlist the
    services of a physician to bring on a quick death

16
Figure 21-3 Types of Transmission for Reported
U.S. AIDS Cases as of 2001
17
The Medical Establishment
  • The social institution focuses on combating
    disease and improving health
  • The rise of scientific medicine
  • AMA American Medical Association founded in
    1847
  • By early 1900s state boards agreed to certify
    only AMA approved
  • M.D.s D.O. (Osteopaths) on one level
  • Other healers kept tradition but occupy lesser
    role
  • Chiropractors, herbalists, midwives, etc.

18
Holistic Medicine
  • Holistic medicine an approach to health care
    that emphasizes prevention of illness and takes
    into account a persons entire physical and
    social environment
  • Patients are people
  • Concern for the environment in which the person
    lives and their lifestyle
  • Responsibility, not dependency
  • Favors an active approach to health encouraging
    patients take health-promoting behaviors
  • Personal treatment
  • Favoring a more personal relaxed environment,
    such as the persons home

19
Medicine in Socialist Societies
  • China
  • Government controls most health care operations
  • Barefoot doctors in rural areas, traditional
    healing arts, acupuncture, medicinal herbs and
    holistic concern
  • Russian federation
  • Medical care is in transition, but it is held the
    all citizens have a right to basic medical care
  • Tax funds are used to provide care
  • Disparities in medical care increase among
    segments of the population

20
Medicine in Capitalist Societies
  • Sweden (1891)
  • Compulsory, comprehensive government medical care
    system offered to all socialized medicine
  • Great Britain (1948)
  • Duel system of public health services (national
    health service) for all citizens and may also
    purchase private services
  • Canada (1972)
  • A single-payer model for all citizens government
    program (insurance company)
  • But, like Britain , purchase private services
  • Japan
  • Physicians have private practice
  • Paid like much of Europe, combination of
    government programs (80 of costs) and private
    insurance

21
Figure 21-4 Extent of Socialized Medicine in
Selected Countries
22
Medicine in the U. S.
  • Direct fee system
  • The patient pays directly for services provided
    by doctor and hospitals
  • Private insurance
  • 63 of Americans have access to medical care
    benefits through their work or union
  • 8 purchase private coverage on their own
  • Few programs pay all medical costs
  • Public insurance programs
  • Medicare for those over 65, Medicaid for those in
    poverty and for veterans
  • 24 of Americans receive medical attention via
    some form of government program, though many also
    have some private insurance
  • Health maintenance organizations
  • An organization that provides comprehensive
    medical care to subscribers for a fixed fee
  • Preventive approach to health Makes a profit if
    subscribers stay healthy

23
Theoretical Analysis
  • Structural-functional analysis
  • Talcott Parsons the sick role
  • Illness suspends routine duties
  • A sick person must want to get well
  • A sick person must seek competent help
  • The doctor patient relationship as hierarchical
  • Symbolic-interaction analysis
  • We socially construct our ideas of health and
    illness How we define it becomes real
  • We socially construct our ideas of treatment
  • Social-conflict analysis
  • Issues of
  • Limited access, the profit motive, and the
    politics of medicine
  • Interests of one group versus others
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