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Social Assumptions, Medical Categories
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A study of social assumptions, specific events, medical categories, distinct groups and ideas of control in health research. It examines presumptions about gender, race and age with particular refe...
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05 June 1997

A study of social assumptions, specific events, medical categories, distinct groups and ideas of control in health research. This book examines presumptions about gender, race and age with particular reference to the "biological clock" and notions of "civilized countries" and "primitive races". The volume is divided into three sections. The first section spells out the author's new theory of medicalism - a co-emergent process of health care which puts health-care consumers on an equal causal footing with health-care providers. The second section takes up each of the issues of age, sex and race in turn and looks at the particular consequences of these assumptions for specific health events. With age, fertility is the focus. With sex and race, the focus is on cancer. The third section deals with action both in terms of doing better research and making informed choices about health care.
Price: $134.99
Pages: 236
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Imprint: JAI Press Inc.
Series: Advances in Medical Sociology
Publication Date:
05 June 1997
ISBN: 9780762302437
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
MEDICAL / Public Health, Public health & preventive medicine, Health systems & services, Sociology & anthropology
Part 1 Out of control groups: problems with the social construction of scientific notions of control in health research; medicalism - the co-emergence of the body business. Part 2 Specific assumptions, specific events: consequences for health events; age - the myth of the biological time clock; sex - gender blind, sex blind; race - "civilized countries" and "primitive races". Part 3 Taking control: doing health research, policy politics and practice; consuming health research, policy and practice.