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Unequal Health examines the reasons why stark differences in health
and well-being persist, even as the health care industry and access
to health care grow. The third edition of this powerful book
retains the accessible style and focus on inequality from previous
editions while featuring significant new material throughout. After
an overview of key themes, the book introduces the concept of
epidemiology-measuring the number of people who are sick or
dying-and offers an overview of health trends over time. Author
Grace Budrys distills the latest research to consider the relevance
of sex, race, income, and education, and relative social status on
health. The book discusses disease, habits that contribute to
health, the relationship between health care and health status,
genetics, socioeconomic inequality, health policy, and more. The
third edition features a new chapter on diet, an increased
discussion of substance abuse and the attention it receives based
on who is engaging in this behavior, new material on income and
education variables and inequality, a new discussion of the
Affordable Care Act and its impact, and more.
How Nonprofits Work looks at nonprofit organizations through a
sociological lens, identifying characteristics that make some
nonprofits successful and characteristics that cause challenges,
focusing on nonprofits in the health services sector. The book
opens with helpful background information about nonprofit
organizations, then shares case studies that take readers more
deeply into the challenges and successes of various organizations.
Given the trials nonprofits face, this timely book helps readers
move beyond the good intentions in nonprofits to find successful
practices.
The authors recontextualize contemporary sociological theory to
argue that in recent decades sociology has been deeply permeated by
a new paradigm, conflict constructionism. Their analysis integrates
and sheds new light on eight prominent domains of recent social
thought: the micro-level; discourses, framing, and renewed interest
in signs and language; the construction of difference and
dominance; regulation and punishment; cultural complexity and
transculturation; the body; new approaches to the role of the
state; and a consistent conflict perspective. The paradigm combines
elements of both social construction theory and conflict theory. It
has deep roots in critical theory and more recent links to
postmodernism. It is associated with postmodern social thought,
although it is less radical and more adaptable to empirical inquiry
than postmodernism. The authors tie their new conceptualization of
social theory to contemporary applications of social theory in
everyday life. Features of this text:
Rethinking Contemporary Social Theory outlines a new theoretical
paradigm emerging from out of social construction theory, conflict
theory, Marxism and critical theory and argues that these insights
are redefining social theory as a whole. The authors select ten
fields within sociology and in each one trace the reception and
impact of the new paradigm. The fields include gender, sexuality,
race/ethnicity, media and the sociology of family life. Drawing on
Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, the authors
identify causes for this paradigm shift, which include the
contributions of specific individuals, the general intellectual
climate and various social changes such as globalisation and
neoliberalism.
How Nonprofits Work looks at nonprofit organizations through a
sociological lens, identifying characteristics that make some
nonprofits successful and characteristics that cause challenges,
focusing on nonprofts in the health services sector. The book opens
with helpful background information about nonprofit organizations,
then shares case studies that take readers more deeply into the
challenges and successes of various organizations. Given the trials
nonprofits face in the current economic climate, this timely book
helps readers move beyond the good intentions in nonprofits to find
successful practices.
Market-Based Health Care will define for students the challenges,
arguments and politics behind the concept of consumer driven health
care including what it would look like if the business sector would
do a better job of organizing our health care arrangements and
remove any governmental components built into the system. As a
sociologist interested in health care, Budrys focuses on the impact
our health care arrangements have on not just an economic level but
how they affect people as well. This is an overwhelmingly complex
topic and debate and one that is discussed widely in the classroom.
This will be the first text to clearly present the market-based
health care model and how doctors, medical insurance and "big
pharma" play a role in its development.
Unequal Health examines the reasons why stark differences in health
and well-being persist, even as the health care industry and access
to health care grow. The third edition of this powerful book
retains the accessible style and focus on inequality from previous
editions while featuring significant new material throughout. After
an overview of key themes, the book introduces the concept of
epidemiology-measuring the number of people who are sick or
dying-and offers an overview of health trends over time. Author
Grace Budrys distills the latest research to consider the relevance
of sex, race, income, and education, and relative social status on
health. The book discusses disease, habits that contribute to
health, the relationship between health care and health status,
genetics, socioeconomic inequality, health policy, and more. The
third edition features a new chapter on diet, an increased
discussion of substance abuse and the attention it receives based
on who is engaging in this behavior, new material on income and
education variables and inequality, a new discussion of the
Affordable Care Act and its impact, and more.
Market-Based Health Care will define for students the challenges,
arguments and politics behind the concept of consumer driven health
care including what it would look like if the business sector would
do a better job of organizing our health care arrangements and
remove any governmental components built into the system. As a
sociologist interested in health care, Budrys focuses on the impact
our health care arrangements have on not just an economic level but
how they affect people as well. This is an overwhelmingly complex
topic and debate and one that is discussed widely in the classroom.
This will be the first text to clearly present the market-based
health care model and how doctors, medical insurance and "big
pharma" play a role in its development.
Our Unsystematic Health Care System presents readers with a
comprehensive overview of the U.S. healthcare system with an
emphasis on change. It opens with a comparison of U.S. life
expectancy and national expenditures with those of other
economically advanced countries. The chapters that follow outline
the different sectors of the healthcare system including public
health, physician and hospital networks, private and public health
insurance plans, and the pharmaceutical industry. The book's
conclusion considers forces outside of the healthcare system that
play a role in determining Americans' health status and longevity.
Our Unsystematic Health Care System is the ideal book for
introducing readers to the basics of the complex U.S. health care
system in an accessible way. New to this Edition: New chapter on
public health outlines public health origins, workings, and
achievements to give students the background needed to discuss
current crises such as COVID-19 and the overturning of Roe v Wade
(Chapter 2) New chapter on the pharmaceutical industry explores
drug development, advertising, and legislation to explore why the
cost of drugs is so high (Chapter 7) New chapter on the social
determinants of health considers the World Health Organization's
view that neither behavior nor healthcare arrangements are
primarily responsible for people's health (Chapter 9)
Our Unsystematic Health Care System presents readers with a
comprehensive overview of the U.S. healthcare system with an
emphasis on change. It opens with a comparison of U.S. life
expectancy and national expenditures with those of other
economically advanced countries. The chapters that follow outline
the different sectors of the healthcare system including public
health, physician and hospital networks, private and public health
insurance plans, and the pharmaceutical industry. The book's
conclusion considers forces outside of the healthcare system that
play a role in determining Americans' health status and longevity.
Our Unsystematic Health Care System is the ideal book for
introducing readers to the basics of the complex U.S. health care
system in an accessible way. New to this Edition: New chapter on
public health outlines public health origins, workings, and
achievements to give students the background needed to discuss
current crises such as COVID-19 and the overturning of Roe v Wade
(Chapter 2) New chapter on the pharmaceutical industry explores
drug development, advertising, and legislation to explore why the
cost of drugs is so high (Chapter 7) New chapter on the social
determinants of health considers the World Health Organization's
view that neither behavior nor healthcare arrangements are
primarily responsible for people's health (Chapter 9)
Our Unsystematic Health Care System presents readers with a
comprehensive overview of the U.S. health care delivery system.
Significantly revised and updated, the fourth edition explores the
implementation of the Affordable Care Act, or "Obamacare," as it
unfolds-including both challenges and successes. Grace Budrys
traces how dissatisfied Americans have been with the country's
health care arrangements and the continuing changes of health care
reforms. The fourth edition examines the impact the Affordable Care
Act has had on the U.S. health care system since it was enacted in
2010, including efforts to identify the appropriate indicators to
gauge the law's effects. As in previous editions, the book
introduces readers to health insurance arrangements in the United
States, including private and public health insurance plans, then
compares our health care system to those in other countries, which
often have better patient outcomes and lower cost. The fourth
edition points out the factors outside of the health care system
that might play a role in explaining why Americans do not enjoy
better health and longer life expectancy. Our Unsystematic Health
Care System is an ideal book for introducing readers, especially
students in courses such as medical sociology, public health, or
health policy and administration, to the basics of the complex U.S.
health care system in an accessible way.
Our Unsystematic Health Care System presents readers with a
comprehensive overview of the U.S. health care delivery system.
Significantly revised and updated, the fourth edition explores the
implementation of the Affordable Care Act, or "Obamacare," as it
unfolds-including both challenges and successes. Grace Budrys
traces how dissatisfied Americans have been with the country's
health care arrangements and the continuing changes of health care
reforms. The fourth edition examines the impact the Affordable Care
Act has had on the U.S. health care system since it was enacted in
2010, including efforts to identify the appropriate indicators to
gauge the law's effects. As in previous editions, the book
introduces readers to health insurance arrangements in the United
States, including private and public health insurance plans, then
compares our health care system to those in other countries, which
often have better patient outcomes and lower cost. The fourth
edition points out the factors outside of the health care system
that might play a role in explaining why Americans do not enjoy
better health and longer life expectancy. Our Unsystematic Health
Care System is an ideal book for introducing readers, especially
students in courses such as medical sociology, public health, or
health policy and administration, to the basics of the complex U.S.
health care system in an accessible way.
Current and anticipated changes in this country's health care
system are likely to add momentum to the physicians' union
movement, according to Grace Budrys. She documents the emergence
and development of the Union of American Physicians and Dentists
(UAPD), founded in the San Francisco Bay area in 1972, and suggests
it may be a harbinger of renewed organizing efforts throughout the
country.Representing both salaried and private practice doctors,
the UAPD gained strength in the early 1980s during the crisis in
malpractice suits, and surged again in recent years in response to
steadily increasing medical corporatization. Budrys argues that the
approach to modernization now favored across the country resembles
that of the industrialization era. As health organizations become
larger, more centralized, and more hierarchical, decisions are made
further from the work site and some traditional responsibilities
are delegated to lower-paid, less-trained workers.Nevertheless, the
image of blue-collar industrial workers organizing into unions is
not easily reconciled with our society's image of physicians as
highly trained and highly skilled members of a profession long
considered the bastion of individualists. Budrys suggests that
doctors' unions in general and the UAPD in particular may provide a
model for other nontraditional groups and occupations seeking
solutions to contemporary problems in the workplace. After
discussing the laws governing workers' organizing rights and their
interpretation by the courts, she concludes with commentary on the
organizing activity taking place among highly paid and highly
educated workers.
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