
In the maelstrom of current public health debate over the social determinants of health, this book offers a well-balanced discussion on the roots of prevalent strains of thought on the matter. While this area of research deals in complex problems, it is often dominated by those who deploy rather categorical, partisan positions, citing from a wide range of contradictory statistical studies. Stephen Kunitz brings a measured, balanced and independent perspective to bear on the debate, taking a step back from current arguments to look at the fundamental issues through a socio-historical lens. Part I describes how ideas about the costs and benefits of industrialization, and about the causes of disease, have been used by writers from different ideological persuasions to explain the health of populations. Part II focuses on some of the ideas that have been particularly influential in contemporary debates: factors such as standard of living, community and its loss, inequality, and globalization. The fact that these have been used to support differing explanations of the determinants of population health suggests that there are no easy generalizations in a field with so many discrepant findings. Scientists often ignore anomalous findings in the interests of advancing a particular paradigm, until the anomalies outweigh the norm and a new paradigm is created. This book argues that in considering social determinants of health, no meaningful over-arching explanations may be possible. Rather, it is by immersion in the reality of particular contexts - work settings, historical periods, geopolitical regions, and governmental credos - that we may gain a better understanding of the way in which social forces shape patterns of health and disease.
This book investigates whether a singular, over-arching theory can explain the social determinants of health across diverse populations. Stephen J. Kunitz, a physician and researcher, utilizes a socio-historical framework to evaluate how industrialization, economic inequality, and globalization influence health outcomes. He argues that because statistical findings in public health are often contradictory and context-dependent, researchers should prioritize the study of specific historical and geopolitical realities over the pursuit of universal paradigms.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a critical, skeptical examination of the methodologies used in social epidemiology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's commitment to challenging partisan biases within the field.
Page Count:
298
Publication Date:
2006-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190294671
ISBN-13:
9780190294670
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