HST209 - 03 10 22
HST209 - 03 10 22
HST209 - 03 10 22
Introduction to Health:
Determinants of Health and
Health Care
Fall 2022
Health Studies Program
University College
University of Toronto
2
Recap 3
Recap
4
Paradigms of
Health 5
Sociology
6
The Discipline of Sociology
● Macro level
○ Social structures
○ Social institutions
● Micro level
○ Individual and group interactions
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 7
Sociology, Medicine and Health
● Sociology in medicine
○ Study of health-related problems, experiences, etc.
● Sociology of medicine
○ Study of health care organization, medical settings
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 8
Sociology, Medicine and Health
Sociology of Health & Illness Sociology of Medicine
● Distribution of disease and death ● Organization of healthcare system
● Socio-demographic explanations ● Medico-industrial complex
for disease and death ● Class, patriarchy and sexism in the
● Experiencing and talking about organization of healthcare
disease and death
Juanne Nancarrow Clark, Health, Illness, and Medicine in Canada, 6th edition, Toronto, Oxford, 2012. Adapted from Table 1.1, p. 4.
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Exercise: Sociology of / in medicine
10
Approaches to Sociology of Health
● Functionalism
● Symbolic interactionism
● Materialism (Conflict theory)
● Feminism
● Anti-racism / Post-colonialism
● Postmodernism
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 11
Functionalist Approaches
● Structural functionialism
○ All social institutions, structures, etc., have a “function” for society
○ “Organic” model of society
○ Critiques?
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 12
Interactionist & Constructionist
Approaches to Health
● How do individuals interact?
● How do they create meaning through interaction?
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 13
Interactionist & Constructionist
Approaches to Health
● Erving Goffman
○ Total institutions
○ Stigma
○ Labelling theory
● “Biographical disruptions”
○ Adjusting ‘self’ around illness
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 14
Interactionist & Constructionist
Approaches to Health
● Interactionism and health care
○ “Cloak of competence” (Haas & Shaffir)
■ Impression management to display ‘competence’ and ‘skill’
○ Having Epilepsy (Schneider & Conrad)
■ Centrality of uncertainty
■ Controlling symptoms
■ Changing relationships
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63; Juanne Nancarrow Clark, Health, Illness, and
Medicine in Canada, 6th edition, Toronto, Oxford, 2012.
15
Interactionist & Constructionist
Approaches to Health
● Social Construction of Reality
○ Berger & Luckmann
○ Diseases as “political accomplishments”
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 16
Interactionist & Constructionist
Approaches to Health
● “Medicalization” (Conrad & Schneider)
○ Behaviours come to be defined as “illness” or “disease”
○ Behaviour first defined as deviant
○ Prospecting: announcement of “finding”
○ Claims-making: medical/non-medical interests promote new medical designation
○ Legitimacy: official designation
○ Institutionalization: official medical classification; treatment organizations
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 17
Materialist (Conflict) Approaches
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 18
Materialist (Conflict) Approaches
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 19
Feminist Approaches to Health
● Patriarchy
○ Male-dominated nature of society
● Concern with gender inequalities
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 20
Feminist Approaches to Health
● Discovery of “menopause”
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 21
Anti-Racism / Post-Colonial
Approaches
● Impact of race on health/health care
● Post-colonialism
○ Race & “the other”
○ Giving “the other” a voice
● Intersectionality theory
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 22
Anti-Racism / Post-Colonial
Approaches
● Focus on “racialized” experiences of
○ Care recipients
○ Care providers
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 23
Postmodern
Approaches to
Health
https://doi.org/10.1016/B0-08-043076-7/01034-2
24
Postmodern
Approaches to
Health
https://doi.org/10.1016/B0-08-043076-7/01942-2
25
Postmodern Approaches to Health
● Postmodernism / post-structuralism
○ No objective “truth” to be known
○ Subjective knowledges
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault, “Sociological Perspectives on Health and Health Care,” in Toba Bryant, Dennis Raphael and Marcia Rioux, Eds., Staying Alive: Critical
Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care, 2nd edition, Toronto, Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2010, pp. 41-63. 26
Postmodern Approaches to Health
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Political Economy
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● Political economy…
○ State/governance
○ Economy
○ Civil society
● Issues considered…
○ How is wealth produced?
○ How is wealth distributed?
○ Who has power in society? Why is it that way?
○ Who controls resources? The state or the markets?
Dennis Raphael and Toba Bryant, “Maintaining population health in a period of welfare state decline: Political economy as the missing
dimension in health promotion theory and practice,” Promotion and Education, vol. 14, no. 4 (2006): 236-261.
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Dennis Raphael and Toba Bryant, “Maintaining population health in a period of welfare state decline: Political economy as the missing
dimension in health promotion theory and practice,” Promotion and Education, vol. 14, no. 4 (2006): 236-261.
Income Inequality & Health
● Kennedy, Kawachi & Prothrow-Stith (1996)
○ Income inequality in US states
■ Increased chances of mortality
● Controlling for poverty and smoking
● Kaplan et al. (1996)
○ Income inequality in US states
■ Increased chances of mortality
■ Homicide/violent crimes; smoking; physical inactivity; higher rates of
unemployment, imprisonment
● Lynch et al. (1998)
○ Income inequality in 282 metropolitan areas in the US
■ Increased mortality
Bruce P. Kennedy et al., “Income distribution and mortality: Cross sectional ecological study of the Robin Hood Index in the United States,” BMJ, vol. 312, pp. 1004-1007, 1996; George A.
Kaplan et al., “Inequality in income and mortality in the United States: Analysis of mortality and potential pathways,” BMJ, vol. 312, pp. 999-1003, 1996; John W. Lynch et al., “Income 31
inequality and mortality in metropolitan areas of the United States,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 88, no. 7, pp. 1074-1080, 1998.
Evidence
Ichiro Kawachi, et al., “Social Capital, Income Inequality, and Mortality,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 87, no. 9, 1491-1498. 32
Pathways/Mechanisms
Ichiro Kawachi and Bruce P. Kennedy, “Income Inequality and Health: Pathways and Mechanisms,” Health Services Research, vol. 34, no. 1 (1999,
Part II): 215-227. 33
Evidence: Disinvestment in Human
Capital
● State-level comparisons of income inequality and all cause mortality
● Significant correlation (r=0.62) between income inequality and all-cause
mortality
George A. Kaplan et al., “Inequality in income and mortality in the United States: Analysis of mortality and potential pathways,” British Medical
Journal, vol. 312 (1996): 999-1003. 34
35
Ichiro Kawachi and Bruce P. Kennedy, “Income Inequality and Health: Pathways and Mechanisms,” Health Services Research, vol. 34, no. 1 (1999,
Part II): 215-227. 36
37
Ichiro Kawachi, et al., “Social Capital, Income Inequality, and Mortality,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 87, no. 9, 1491-1498.
38
Ichiro Kawachi, et al., “Social Capital, Income Inequality, and Mortality,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 87, no. 9, 1491-1498.
39
● Lower levels of social trust associated with higher rates of most major causes
of death
○ Heart disease, cancer, cerebrovascular disease, unintentional injury, infant mortality
● Income inequality ➡ increased mortality, mediated by decreased social
capital
Ichiro Kawachi, et al., “Social Capital, Income Inequality, and Mortality,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 87, no. 9, 1491-1498.
Pathways/Mechanisms
Ichiro Kawachi and Bruce P. Kennedy, “Income Inequality and Health: Pathways and Mechanisms,” Health Services Research, vol. 34, no. 1 (1999,
Part II): 215-227. 40
41
William Dressler, “Culture and blood pressure: Using consensus analysis to create measurement,” Cultural Anthropology Methods, vol. 8, no. 3
(1996): 6-8
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Vincente Navarro, et al., “Politics and Health Outcomes,” Lancet, vol. 368 (2006): 1033-1035.
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* Significant at 90%.
† Significant at 95%.
Adapted from Vincente Navarro, et al., “Politics and Health Outcomes,” Lancet, vol. 368 (2006): 1035, Table 1.
Tutorial Activity
Thinking Political Economy
economic approach?
3/9 Yukon seeks...
Padlet:
https://utoronto.padlet.org/anthonylombardo/j2 4 / 10 Political kindling...
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5 / 11 Economic system...
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