
A POLITICAL PROVOCATION FROM A PAIR OF PHYSICIANS WRITING OUTSIDE THEIR LANEAmericans care about their health. Americans pay lots of money in hopes of maintaining their health. So why are Americans so unhealthy?The reason is simple: as a country, the United States overinvests in medical care at the expense of the social, economic, and cultural forces that produce health. The rise of medicine as a cornerstone of American life and culture has coincided with a social and political devaluation of factors demonstrated to mean more to our vitality than anything else -- influences like where we live, work, and play; livable wages that create opportunity for healthy living; and gender and racial equity.In Pained, physicians Michael Stein and Sandro Galea push the conversation around American health where it belongs: toward matters of class, money, and culture. Across more than 50 essays and data illustrations, Pained casts a light on how the structural components of everyday life -- like school, housing, police, even cell phones -- ultimately determine who gets to be healthy in today's America. In doing so, it makes a case for reframing our political discourse in less myopic, more effectual terms.Accessible and surprising, political but not partisan, Pained is the urgent, uncomfortable conversation that American needs in this challenging moment. It will delight and infuriate readers of all political stripes.
This book investigates why the United States experiences poor health outcomes despite significant financial investment in medical care. Authors Sandro Galea and Michael Stein, both physicians, argue that the American healthcare system overemphasizes clinical intervention while neglecting the social, economic, and cultural determinants of health. They propose a framework that shifts the focus from individual medical treatment to the structural factors—such as housing, wages, and equity—that fundamentally shape the vitality of the population.
What You Will Find
Experts and readers recognize this work as a provocative contribution to the public health discourse that challenges conventional medical-centric thinking. The text is noted for its accessibility, making complex sociological and economic arguments understandable for a broad audience interested in health policy.
Page Count:
266
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019751040X
ISBN-13:
9780197510407
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!