|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
This far-reaching volume analyzes the social, cultural, political,
and economic factors contributing to mental health issues and
shaping treatment options in the Asian and Pacific world. Multiple
lenses examine complex experiences and needs in this vast region,
identifying not only cultural issues at the individual and
collective levels, but also the impacts of colonial history,
effects of war and disasters, and the current climate of
globalization on mental illness and its care. These concerns are
located in the larger context of physical health and its
determinants, worldwide goals such as reducing global poverty, and
the evolving mental health response to meet rising challenges
affecting the diverse populations of the region. Chapters focus on
countries in East, Southeast, and South Asia plus Oceania and
Australia, describing: * National history of psychiatry and its
acceptance. * Present-day mental health practice and services. *
Mental/physical health impact of recent social change. *
Disparities in accessibility, service delivery, and quality of
care. * Collaborations with indigenous and community approaches to
healing. * Current mental health resources, the state of policy,
and areas for intervention. A welcome addition to the global health
literature, Mental Health in Asia and the Pacific brings historical
depth and present-day insight to practitioners providing services
in this diverse area of the world as well as researchers and
policymakers studying the region.
This work identifies significant factors influencing, on the one
hand, the historical pattern of sexually acquired diseases in 12
countries in Asia and the Pacific and, on the other hand, factors
shaping the government and community responses to that pattern.
Contributors analyze the role of supranational forces such as
colonialism and economic modernization as well as distinctive
national factors. The geographic scope is wide, extending from
India in the west, to China in the east, to Australia in the south.
The chronological scope is equally ambitious and contributors
review two centuries or more of history, while also addressing the
effect of the AIDS pandemic in a region of great social and
economic dynamism. A number of factors including gender and
economic inequality, as well as colonialism and economic growth,
have been identified as important to the historical spread of
sexually transmitted diseases and to the collective response of the
spread. Quantitative data on disease incidence and mortality are
used extensively throughout the book as are demographic, economic,
and social statistics.
In a series of case studies of sexually transmitted disease and
HIV/AIDS from around Africa, contributors examine the social,
cultural, and political-economic bases of risk, transmission, and
response to epidemic disease. This book brings together major
contributions to the historical study of epidemic disease in
developing countries and considers how particular constellations of
cultural, social, political, and economic factors in different
countries have affected the historical patterns of disease and
collective (official and community) response to them. This book is
a companion volume to "Sex, Disease, and Society: A Comparative
History of Sexually Transmitted Diseases and HIV/AIDS in Asia and
the Pacific" (Greenwood, 1997).
From this endeavor to provide insight into the conjunctions and
disjunctions between the histories of STDs and the AIDS pandemic in
Sub-Saharan Africa certain common issues have emerged. These
include medical ambiguity and epidemiologic diversity; cultural
change; racism; gender, labor migration, and economic instability;
and the practice of biomedicine and epidemiology in African
contexts. All of these factors are embedded in the colonial legacy
and post-colonial political economic conditions across the
continent.
This far-reaching volume analyzes the social, cultural, political,
and economic factors contributing to mental health issues and
shaping treatment options in the Asian and Pacific world. Multiple
lenses examine complex experiences and needs in this vast region,
identifying not only cultural issues at the individual and
collective levels, but also the impacts of colonial history,
effects of war and disasters, and the current climate of
globalization on mental illness and its care. These concerns are
located in the larger context of physical health and its
determinants, worldwide goals such as reducing global poverty, and
the evolving mental health response to meet rising challenges
affecting the diverse populations of the region. Chapters focus on
countries in East, Southeast, and South Asia plus Oceania and
Australia, describing: * National history of psychiatry and its
acceptance. * Present-day mental health practice and services. *
Mental/physical health impact of recent social change. *
Disparities in accessibility, service delivery, and quality of
care. * Collaborations with indigenous and community approaches to
healing. * Current mental health resources, the state of policy,
and areas for intervention. A welcome addition to the global health
literature, Mental Health in Asia and the Pacific brings historical
depth and present-day insight to practitioners providing services
in this diverse area of the world as well as researchers and
policymakers studying the region.
|
You may like...
Harry's House
Harry Styles
CD
(1)
R267
R237
Discovery Miles 2 370
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|