chapter 20 health care. chapter outline the structure of health care in the u.s. theoretical...
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Chapter 20
Health Care
Chapter Outline
The Structure of Health Care in the U.S. Theoretical Perspectives on Health Care Health and Sickness in America: A Picture of
Diversity Attitudes Toward Health and Illness The Health Care Crisis in America Death and Dying
Theoretical Perspectives on Health Care
Functionalists: health care system has positive and negative functions in society.
Conflict theory: health care reflects the inequalities in society.
Symbolic interactions and the role of perceptions: illness, wellness, and health care are socially constructed.
Perspectives on the Sociology of Health: Fundamentalist Theory
Central Point The health care system has both positive and negative functions
Fundamental Problem Uncovered
The health care system produces some negative functions
Policy Implications Policy should decrease negative functions of health care system for minority groups, the poor, and women
Perspectives on the Sociology of Health: Conflict Theory
Central Point Health care reflects the inequalities in society
Fundamental Problem Uncovered
Excessive bureaucratization of the health care system and privatization lead to excess cost
Policy Implications Policy should improve access to health care for minority racial-ethnic groups, the poor, and women
Perspectives on the Sociology of Health: Symbolic Interaction
Central Point Illness is partly socially constructed
Fundamental Problem Uncovered
Patients are patronized and infantilized
Policy Implications
Doctors, nurses, and other medical personnel should periodically take the sick role of the patient, as an instructional device
Social Factors in Illness
Race-ethnicity, social class, gender, and age are major factors in disease and health.
White women live longest, and Black men the shortest.
The mortality rate of Native Americans is one and a half times that of the general population.
Social Factors in Illness
Hispanics contract tuberculosis at 4x the rate of Whites.
The more money one makes, the more healthy one perceives oneself to be.
The lower one's social class status, the greater are one's chances of tuberculosis, heart disease, cancer, arthritis, and infant mortality.
Role of Gender in Illness
Older women are more likely to suffer from stress, overweight, hypertension, and chronic illness than older men.
There is still a tendency for the male-dominated profession to regard the problems of women as nonmainstream and "special".
Social Attitudes and Stigma and Illness
If one has an illness that he or she might have done more to prevent, than that person is blamed for the illness.
A person who is HIV positive, is partly blamed, heavily stigmatized and treated as a social outcast.
Stigmatization also is a factor for those with chronic fatigue syndrome.
Health Care Crisis in America
Modern medicine in America is a highly structured, high-status profession.
High costs, malpractice suits and abuse of the fee for service system have resulted in a health care crisis.
Programs for large HMO's and national universal health insurance have met defeat in Congress.
The Right to Die
Two guidelines:
1. The physician must explain the options available to sustain life to the patient or close family members who have the right to refuse “heroic” treatment.
2. The physician may honor the living will of the patient.
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