9780822319658-0822319659-The Social Medicine Reader

The Social Medicine Reader

ISBN-13: 9780822319658
ISBN-10: 0822319659
Edition: First Edition
Author: Larry R. Churchill, Sue E. Estroff, Nancy M. P. King, Ronald P. Strauss, Gail E. Henderson
Publication date: 1997
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Format: Paperback 516 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780822319658
ISBN-10: 0822319659
Edition: First Edition
Author: Larry R. Churchill, Sue E. Estroff, Nancy M. P. King, Ronald P. Strauss, Gail E. Henderson
Publication date: 1997
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Format: Paperback 516 pages

Summary

The Social Medicine Reader (ISBN-13: 9780822319658 and ISBN-10: 0822319659), written by authors Larry R. Churchill, Sue E. Estroff, Nancy M. P. King, Ronald P. Strauss, Gail E. Henderson, was published by Duke University Press Books in 1997. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other Health Care Delivery (Administration & Medicine Economics, Health Policy, Public Health, Social Sciences, Sociology) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Social Medicine Reader (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Health Care Delivery books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.6.

Description

To meet the needs of the rapidly changing world of health care, future physicans and health care providers will need to be trained to become wiser scientists and humanists in order to understand the social and moral as well as technological aspects of health and illness. The Social Medicine Reader is designed to meet this need.
Based on more than a decade of teaching social medicine to first-year medical students at the pioneering Department of Social Medicine at the University of North Carolina, The Social Medicine Reader defines the meaning of the social medicine perspective and offers an approach for teaching it. Looking at medicine from a variety of perspectives, this anthology features fiction, medical reports, scholarly essays, poetry, case studies, and personal narratives by patients and doctors—all of which contribute to an understanding of how medicine and medical practice is profoundly influenced by social, cultural, political, and economic forces.
What happens when a person becomes a patient? How are illness and disability experienced? What causes disease? What can medicine do? What constitutes a doctor/patient relationship? What are the ethical obligations of a health care provider? These questions and many others are raised by The Social Medicine Reader, which is organized into sections that address how patients experience illness, cultural attitudes toward disease, social factors related to health problems, the socialization of physicians, the doctor/patient relationship, health care ethics and the provider’s role, medical care financing, rationing, and managed care.

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