Bibliographic Information

New directions in the sociology of health

edited by Pamela Abbott and Geoff Payne

(Explorations in sociology, no. 36)

Falmer Press in conjunction with the British Sociological Association, 1990

  • : pbk

Available at  / 26 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 175-189) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9781850007869

Description

The sociology of medicine has come a long way from its origins in epidemiology and clinical practice. Like all specialist areas of study it has developed its own internal debates, over the years there has been a shift from a sociology in medicine to a sociology of medicine, and from a sociolgy of medicine, towards a sociology of health and illness. It is to the development of this latter perspective that this volume is addressed. 1

Table of Contents

  • Introduction - developing the sociology of health, Pamela Abbott and Geoff Payne
  • socio-economic conditions and aspects of health - respiratory symptoms in four mining areas, Gary Littlejohn et al
  • opening the black box - inequalities in women's health, Sara Arber
  • distance decay and information deprivation - health implications for people in rural isolation, George Giarchi
  • "we're home helps because we care" - the experience of home helps caring for the elderly, Lorna Warren
  • hooked? social responses to tranquiliser dependence. Michael Bury and Jonathan Gabe
  • regulating our favourite drug, Robin Bunton
  • say "no" to drugs but yes to clean syringes?, Graham Hart
  • using alternative therapies - marginal medicine and central concerns, Ursula M.Sharma
  • Caribbean home remedies and their importance for black women's health care, Nicki Thorogood
  • health and work in the 1990s - towards a new perspective, Norma Daykin
  • where was sociology in the struggle to re-establish public health?, Thomas Acton and David Chambers.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9781850007876

Description

The sociology of medicine has come a long way from its origins in epidemiology and clinical practice. Like all specialist areas of study it has developed its own internal debates, over the years there has been a shift from a sociology in medicine to a sociology of medicine, and from a sociolgy of medicine, towards a sociology of health and illness. It is to the development of this latter perspective that this volume is addressed.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction - developing the sociology of health, Pamela Abbott and Geoff Payne
  • socio-economic conditions and aspects of health - respiratory symptoms in four mining areas, Gary Littlejohn et al
  • opening the black box - inequalities in women's health, Sara Arber
  • distance decay and information deprivation - health implications for people in rural isolation, George Giarchi
  • "we're home helps because we care" - the experience of home helps caring for the elderly, Lorna Warren
  • hooked? social responses to tranquiliser dependence. Michael Bury and Jonathan Gabe
  • regulating our favourite drug, Robin Bunton
  • say "no" to drugs but yes to clean syringes?, Graham Hart
  • using alternative therapies - marginal medicine and central concerns, Ursula M.Sharma
  • Caribbean home remedies and their importance for black women's health care, Nicki Thorogood
  • health and work in the 1990s - towards a new perspective, Norma Daykin
  • where was sociology in the struggle to re-establish public health?, Thomas Acton and David Chambers.

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