|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Statistics published by the U. S. Department of Commerce (1980)
indicate that in 1977 we spent 8. 1% of our gross national product
(GNP) on life, health, property-casualty, and other forms of
insurance. An additional 5. 7% was used to pay the Social Security
tax, which is another form of insurance premium, for a total of 14.
8% of the GNP. \ Although insurance had its historical origin in
marine insurance, it has now developed into one of the major
industries of the American economy and extends into many areas of
economic activity. One area where growth has been particularly
strong is the medical sector. Health insurance is a major
institution in all industrialized countries. It became a government
responsibility in 1883 when Bismarck intro duced a compulsory
program of health insurance for industrial workers in Germany.
Programs for workers in various industrial and income categories
soon followed in other European countries-Austria (1888), Hungary
(1891), Norway (1909), Servia (1910), Great Britain (1911), and
Russia and Romania (1912) (Rubinow, 1913:250). Programs in these
countries were extended in subsequent years, and other countries in
Europe followed with their own programs. Consequently, today most
industrial countries have universal or near-universal health
insurance coverage. In the United States the issue of national
health insurance has been seriously debated since just prior to
World War I, and polling data since the 1930s show that a
substantial majority of the public has been supportive of such a
program (Erskine, 1975)."
This book, a comprehensive introduction to the problem of acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), lays out the medical facts and
social epidemiology of the infectious disease and illuminates the
complex social problems this disease poses for the United States
and other nations.
Statistics published by the U. S. Department of Commerce (1980)
indicate that in 1977 we spent 8. 1% of our gross national product
(GNP) on life, health, property-casualty, and other forms of
insurance. An additional 5. 7% was used to pay the Social Security
tax, which is another form of insurance premium, for a total of 14.
8% of the GNP. \ Although insurance had its historical origin in
marine insurance, it has now developed into one of the major
industries of the American economy and extends into many areas of
economic activity. One area where growth has been particularly
strong is the medical sector. Health insurance is a major
institution in all industrialized countries. It became a government
responsibility in 1883 when Bismarck intro duced a compulsory
program of health insurance for industrial workers in Germany.
Programs for workers in various industrial and income categories
soon followed in other European countries-Austria (1888), Hungary
(1891), Norway (1909), Servia (1910), Great Britain (1911), and
Russia and Romania (1912) (Rubinow, 1913:250). Programs in these
countries were extended in subsequent years, and other countries in
Europe followed with their own programs. Consequently, today most
industrial countries have universal or near-universal health
insurance coverage. In the United States the issue of national
health insurance has been seriously debated since just prior to
World War I, and polling data since the 1930s show that a
substantial majority of the public has been supportive of such a
program (Erskine, 1975)."
This comprehensive introduction to the problem of AIDS lays out the
medical facts and social epidemiology of the disease and
illuminates the complex social problems this disease poses for the
United States and other nations. Each chapter introduces a key
sociological approach that clarifies how social scientists
understand and explain important social dimensions of the AIDS
epidemic. The authors use of historical comparisons with other
deadly epidemics sets in relief the social problems presented by
AIDS today. AIDS has become the most vexing medical crisis of our
time. But the social aspects of the epidemic are just as complex as
the biomedical aspects of the disease, sharing sociological
characteristics with the Black Death, cholera, and other
devastating epidemics of earlier eras.This comprehensive
introduction to the problem of AIDS lays out the medical facts and
social epidemiology of the disease and illuminates the complex
social problems this disease poses for the United States and other
nations. Each chapter introduces a key sociological approach that
clarifies how social scientists understand and explain important
social dimensions of the AIDS epidemic. The authors use of
historical comparisons with other deadly epidemics sets in relief
the social problems presented by AIDS today.
|
You may like...
Dune: Part 2
Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, …
DVD
R250
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
The Car
Arctic Monkeys
CD
R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R391
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
|