Publisher s note:
The publishers would like to confirm that for Volume 1:
Theoretical and Methodological Developments and Volume 3: Gender
and Healthcare Ellen Annandale was the lead editor and lead author
of the introductions. Kate Hunt was the lead editor for Volume 2:
Understanding the Patterning of Health by Gender and Volume 4:
Gender and Health Behaviours
The order in the printed book did not reflect this distinction,
but we are happy to clarify the correct order.
Life expectancy is higher for women than men in almost every
country, leading the World Health Organization to suggest that
their innate constitution gives women an advantage over men .
However, this differential is far greater in some countries (e.g.
Japan) than others (e.g. Qatar and Botswana) and rapid changes in
the sex differential in life expectancy as seen in the countries of
the former Soviet Union in the last decades of the twentieth
century can only be explained by social factors. Research on health
can thus demonstrate how the ways that different societies
(historically and cross-culturally) create differential life
chances and opportunities for men and women gets written on people
s bodies.
Women s mortality advantage does not translate into better
health across all outcomes. For example, women are diagnosed with
more depression and more joint pain and associated disability. For
many years, it was assumed that the aphorism that women get sicker
but men die quicker (the so-called gender paradox ) was an adequate
and useful summary for gender differences in health, but recent
research shows patterns are far more complex. This complexity poses
exciting challenges for research on gender and health. Gender
inequalities in health provide a window to understand how the
social world gets under the skin and how human health can be
improved.
A tradition of research stemming back to at least the 1960s has
highlighted the gendered assumptions that are built into the
provision of healthcare. This occurs within the community where
women generally shoulder the burden of caring for others, and in
formal health systems where the division of labour is often highly
patriarchal. Gendered assumptions about the kinds of health
problems that men and women suffer from, and about the ways that
they relate to symptoms of illness, may bias decision-making by
service providers, often in ways that are not beneficial to
health.
Issues and themes in and around gender and health such as these
continue to generate a huge scholarly literature, and this new
collection from Routledge s Major Themes in Health and Social
Welfare series meets the need for an authoritative reference work
to help researchers and students navigate and make sense of it. The
collection is made up of four volumes which bring together the best
and most influential canonical and cutting-edge research. It draws
together key works spanning theoretical developments and empirical
research which uses a range of qualitative and quantitative
methods. With a full index, and thoughtful introductions, newly
written by the editors, Gender and Health traces the progress of
research in this field and highlights the challenges for future
research. It will be valued by scholars, students, and researchers
as a vital and enduring resource.
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