The Social Causes of Health and Disease
por Polity
Agotado
Precio original
$74.95
-
Precio original
$74.95
Precio original
$74.95
$74.95
-
$74.95
Precio actual
$74.95
Description
This masterful guide to the social determinants of health has become a go-to text for understanding the role that social factors play in the experience of health and many diseases. In this updated edition, preeminent medical sociologist William C. Cockerham offers the most compelling case yet that stress, poverty, unhealthy lifestyles, and adverse living and working conditions can all be directly associated with illness.
Looking beyond individual explanations for health and disease, Cockerham marshals evidence and theory for those seeking a clear and authoritative overview of the social causes of health and illness. Of particular note in this revised edition are: updates on the power of social class to determine a person’s health and life span; deeper consideration of how the social construction of race matters for a person’s physical and mental health; new research on the role of lifestyles as a social determinant of health; and an analysis of the differential impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic.
This engaging introduction to social epidemiology will be indispensable reading for all students and scholars of medical sociology, especially those with the courage to confront the possibility that society really does make people sick. Preface
1. The Social Causation of Health and Disease
2. A Further Look at the Social Determinants of Health
3. Theorizing about Health and Disease
4. Health Lifestyles
5. The Power of Class
6. Class and Health: Explaining the Relationship
7. Age
8. Gender and Sexuality
9. Race and Ethnicity
10. Other Social Determinants of Health: Neighborhood Disadvantage and Social Capital
Concluding Remarks William C. Cockerham is Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Chair Emeritus at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Research Scholar of Sociology at the College of William & Mary in Virginia.
Looking beyond individual explanations for health and disease, Cockerham marshals evidence and theory for those seeking a clear and authoritative overview of the social causes of health and illness. Of particular note in this revised edition are: updates on the power of social class to determine a person’s health and life span; deeper consideration of how the social construction of race matters for a person’s physical and mental health; new research on the role of lifestyles as a social determinant of health; and an analysis of the differential impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic.
This engaging introduction to social epidemiology will be indispensable reading for all students and scholars of medical sociology, especially those with the courage to confront the possibility that society really does make people sick. Preface
1. The Social Causation of Health and Disease
2. A Further Look at the Social Determinants of Health
3. Theorizing about Health and Disease
4. Health Lifestyles
5. The Power of Class
6. Class and Health: Explaining the Relationship
7. Age
8. Gender and Sexuality
9. Race and Ethnicity
10. Other Social Determinants of Health: Neighborhood Disadvantage and Social Capital
Concluding Remarks William C. Cockerham is Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Chair Emeritus at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Research Scholar of Sociology at the College of William & Mary in Virginia.
PUBLISHER:
Polity Press
ISBN-13:
9781509567218
BINDING:
Hardback
BISAC:
Social Science
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English