Dictionary of Medical Sociology
By (Author) William C. Cockerham
By (author) Ferris Ritchey Ph.D.
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
25th March 1997
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Public health and preventive medicine
Reference works
306.46103
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
482g
As a sociological specialty, medical sociology has a distinct history and literature spanning more than four decades. Since its inception in the years following World War II, medical sociology has attracted significant funds for research, provided extensive employment opportunities within and outside the academy, and produced an increasing number of professional publications. The Medical Sociology Section is the largest specialty represented in both the British and German Sociological Associations and is the second largest among American sociologists. Unlike other, more theoretically oriented branches of sociology, medical sociology was expected by funding agencies and policymakers to produce social knowledge that could be readily applied in medical practice, public health campaigns, and health policy formulation. Thus medical sociology is of interest not only to sociologists, but also to physicians, nurses, psychologists, social workers, therapists, hospital administrators, health insurers, health economists, and others who rely on the basic insights of sociology in research, patient care, and job performance. Like other disciplines, medical sociology has its own fundamental terms and concepts. This reference book concisely defines those terms and is thus a necessary guide for medical sociologists and for practitioners and researchers in related fields. The volume begins with an introductory essay that traces the history of medical sociology. The dictionary then presents short, alphabetically arranged entries for numerous terms. Entries provide a definition of the term and generally discuss the theoretical and practical significance of the topic. For appropriate entries, cross-references to related terms are provided. Entries cite relevant literature, and the volume closes with a bibliography of works cited.
This first dictionary of terminology in medical sociology and the broader area of the sociology of health and illness covers the literature of medicine and sociology over the most recent four decades.... Valuable for students and specialists of medical sociology and for practitioners and researchers in related fields. Recommended for academic and professional libraries that support programs in medical sociology.-Choice
"This first dictionary of terminology in medical sociology and the broader area of the sociology of health and illness covers the literature of medicine and sociology over the most recent four decades.... Valuable for students and specialists of medical sociology and for practitioners and researchers in related fields. Recommended for academic and professional libraries that support programs in medical sociology."-Choice
WILLIAM C. COCKERHAM is Professor of Sociology, Medicine, and Public health, chair of the Sociology Department, and Co-Director of the Program in Social Medicine at the University of Alabama, Birmingham. He is the author of several books, including Medical Sociology, the standard textbook in the field. His articles have appeared in numerous journals, such as Social Forces, Sociological Quarterly, Social Science and Medicine, Journal of Health and Social Behavior, and Journal of Sociological Methods and Research. FERRIS J. RITCHEY is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Alabama, Birmingham. His articles have been published in journals such as Research in the Sociology of Health Care, American Journal of Public Health, Sociological Quarterly, and Journal of Health and Social Behavior.