Chapter 18: Health, Illness and the Health Care System
EPIDEMIOLOGY is the study of PATTERNS OF ILLNESS in a society, but at
root, "Disease" is a social construct. Tonig ht, just an
a) How we define it (physical, but not all; Alcoholism; etc)
b) How we treat it
c) How we respond to it
SO: Sociologists examine the SOCIAL BASES of all this
Some things to look at:
1. What counts as disease/epidemics, etc? (biological (germs);
mental health (stress, etc); Job-related (accidents)
2. Why are some qualities considered "sick" and not others?
(eg, "incorrrect thinking," inattention or partying;
extremist social thinking).
3. How does disease affect the US?
-- Social costs (some cost more than others, eg AIDS, etc)
-- Social impact (leading cause of death: 1989: Heart disease,
Cancer, stroke and related disorders, accidents,
pneumonia/influence).
-- In 1990: Pneumonia/influence; tuberculosis;
gastrocenteritis; heart disease; strokes
4. Whose disease get attention? Historically, primarily white
males. Others (gays, blacks, women) were secondary.
Partly sexism, partly visibility and overt impact. Stuff like
cycle-cell anemia, health problems of the poor, etc, we're
understressed (mention H. Jack Geiger--food as "prescription")
5. How we're organized to treat disease: What works?
a) centralized health care (hospitals, etc) vs. decentralized care
b) "Professionalization" vs. lay
c) Reactive vs. proactive
d) How we direct social resources toward it
e) Political issues (eg, AIDS)
6. The PHILOSOPHY of health care--is it a right or a
privilege?
World Wide, life expectancy istied to class (income, etc):
LOW INCOME MIDDLE HIGH
LIfe expetancy 63(56) 67 77
(all and (low))
Malnutrition 30.8 15.5 under 5
per 1,000 (under 5)
SEE CHART p 476)
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In the US, leading cause of death is:
(other than natural causes):
--Heart, cancer (a close second).
--Suicide and motor vehicle crashes about the same (22 v 19.7 per hun thou)
--AIDS about the same has suicide, etc. Declining, but cases reported not
--Homicide is about 9 (blacks 8 times more likely)
--From all causes, black mortality rate is about twice that of whites
INSURANCE
--Do we need health care/Universal coverage?
Who are the uninsured?
Children (under 15 = 16.1 pct)
Minorities (Hispanic's, 32.9, black 21.1)
Poor (2/3s under $24,000 and 1/3 under 14,000
As a health issue: Domestic violence
The costs of STREET CRIME were about $450 billion (1995 figures).
Of this cost, child abuse and domestic violence constituted about: ONE THIRD
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