Culture, Health and Illness is the leading
international textbook on the role of cultural and
social factors in health, illness, and medical care.
Since first published in 1984, it has been used in over
40 countries within universities, medical schools and
nursing colleges. This new edition meets the
ever-growing need for a clear starting point in
understanding the clinical significance of cultural and
social factors. The book addresses the complex
interactions between health, illness and culture by
setting out anthropological theory in a highly readable,
jargon-free style and integrating this with the practice
of health care using real-life examples and case
histories.Fully revised throughout, the fifth edition
has expanded its coverage of topics that are challenging
both the patient and the carer's understanding of health
and illness: poverty and inequality of healthcare,
genetics, biotechnology, the internet and health,
chronic diseases, drug-resistant infections, changes in
nutrition and body image, medical care of migrants,
medical technology, global pandemics such as AIDS and
malaria, drug and alcohol dependence, and patients'
'languages of distress', a complex topic central to the
doctor-patient relationship. In today's world of
increasing cultural, religious and ethnic diversity of
populations, Culture, Health and Illness is essential
reading for students of medicine, nursing, psychiatry,
public health, health education, international health
and medical anthropology, across the globe. |
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