|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewIllness and death are significant events for people everywhere and no one is spared. Medical beliefs and practices are not the same everywhere. They determine how people understand the causes of illness and death and how they cope with these events. It is not surprising therefore that medical practitioners and others are becoming increasingly aware of the need to understand the influence of society and culture on medical belief and practice. Culture - the customary ways of thinking and acting in society - often affects the outcome of illness, and even which illnesses occur. So those who are actively engaged in studying health and illness are coming to realize the biological and cultural factors need to be considered if we are going to reduce human suffering. The Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology is divided up into two volumes: Topics and Cultures. The first volume contains topical and comparative essays grouped into five sections: - General concepts and perspectives; - Medical systems; - Political, economic, and social issues; - Sexuality, reproduction, and the life cycle, and - Health conditions and diseases. The second volume contains articles that describe the state of health and illness in particular cultures around the world. Every cultural region of the world is represented, as are the cultures at levels of social complexity. The Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology is unique. In addition to providing a large range of topical essays, representing the various perspectives in medical anthropology, these volumes focus on many particular cultures. No other single reference work comes close to marching the depth and breadth of information on the varying cultural background of health and illness around the world. More than 100 experts - generally anthropologists but also other social scientists - have contributed their firsthand experience of medical cultures from around the world. Since medical anthropology is such a diverse course of study, combining both the medical and social worlds, the Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology has many audiences. It can be used both to gain a general understanding of medical anthropology and to find out about particular cultures and topics. For researchers interested in comparing cultures, this work provides information that can guide the selection of particular cultures for further study. For those interested in international studies, the bibliographies in each entry can lead one quickly to the relevant social science literature as well as providing a state-of-the-art assessment of knowledge about medical cultures around the world. For curriculum developers and teachers seeking to internationalize the curriculum, this work is a basic reference and educational resource as well as a directory to other materials. For government officials, it is a repository of information not likely to be available in any other single publication; in many cases, the information provided here is not available at all elsewhere. This major reference work is an essential part of any institution's library and belongs in the library of every medical anthropologist. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Carol R. Ember , Melvin EmberPublisher: Springer Science+Business Media Imprint: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers Dimensions: Width: 20.30cm , Height: 7.00cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 3.050kg ISBN: 9780306477546ISBN 10: 0306477548 Pages: 1071 Publication Date: 31 December 2003 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsPreface. General Concepts And Perspectives. Theoretical and Applied Issues in Cross-Cultural Health Research; E.J. Sobo. Cognitive Medical Anthropology; L.C. Garro. Critical Medical Anthropology; M. Singer. Evolutionary and Ecological Perspectives; A. McElroy. Forensic Anthropology; D.H. Ubelaker. Illness Narratives; R. Loewe. Paleopathology and the Study of Ancient Remains; M.R. Zimmerman. Psychoanalysis and Anthropology; W.H. Kracke. Medical Systems. Bioethics; E.J. Gordon. Biomedical Technologies; M. Lock. Biomedicine; A.D. Gaines, R. Davis-Floyd. Medical Pluralism; H.A. Baer. Medicalization and the Naturalization of Social Control; M. Lock. Phenomenology of Health and Illness; G. Becker. Possession and Trance; E. Bourguignon. Shamanism; M. Winkelman. Political, Economic, And Social Issues. Disasters; J. Glittenberg. Health and Economic Development; A. Castro, P. Farmer. Homelessness; I. Glasser, R. Bridgman. Nutrition and Health; G. Roos. Post-Colonial Development and Health; S. Ferzacca. Refugee Health; P.A Allotey. Social Stratification and Health in the Westen Context; A. Sinha, T. Gibbs. Urban Poor: Health Issues; D. Easton. Sexuality, Reproduction, And The Life Cycle. Aging; J. Sokolovsky. Birth; C. Sargent. Breast Feeding; W.R. Trevathan. Child Growth; B. Bogin. Dying and Death; S.R. Kaufman. Female Genital Cutting; B. Shell-Duncan, Y. Hernlund. Immunization: global programs, local acceptance and resistance; A. Hardon. Population Control; R.J. Meier. Reproductive health; A. Whittaker. Health Conditions And Diseases. Alcohol Use; D.B. Heath, I. Glasser. Child Abuse and Neglect; J.E. Korbin. Cholera and Other Water-borne Diseases; L.M. Whiteford. Chronic Diseases of Aging; C. Hagan Hennessy. Culture Bound Syndromes; L.A. Rebhun. Culture, Stress, and Cardiovascular Disease; W.W. Dressler. Diabetes Mellitus; L.S. Lieberman. Diarrhea; E.A. Berlin. Disability/difference; R.P. Shuttleworth. Drug Use; J.B. Page. Emerging Infectious Diseases; Vinh-Kim Nguyen. Genetic Disease I: History and Mechanisms; L.L. Mai. Genetic Diseases II: Genetic Epidemiology of 150 Common or Informative Diseases; L.L. Mai. HIV/AIDS Research and Prevention; J.W. Carey, E. Picone-DeCaro, M. Spink Neumann, D. Schwartz, D. Easton, D. Cobb St. John. Malaria and Other Major Insect Vector Diseases; J. Coreil. Mental Disorders; A. Cohen. Mental Retardation; F.J. Meaney. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome(SIDS or Cot death); J.J. McKenna. Tobacco Use in Medical Anthropological Perspective; M. Singer. Tuberculosis Research and Control; R. Shrestha-Kuwahara, M. Wilce, H.A. Joseph, J.W. Carey, R. Plank, E. Sumartojo. Health And Illness In The World's Cultures. African Americans; E.J. Bailey. Amish; L.P. Greksa, J.E. Korbin. Argentine Toba; C.R. Valeggia, F. Tola. Badaga; P. Hockings. Bangladeshis; D.J. Holman, K.A. O'Connor. Baliem Valley Dani; L. Butt. British; I. Shaw, L. Woodward. Burmese; M. Skidmore. Cree; N. Adelson. Czechs; Z. Salzmann. Datoga; A. Blystad, O.B. Rekdal. Fore; D.J. Boyd. French; M. Lampl. Fulani; K.R. Hampshire. Garhwalis; S. Kedia. Garifuna; N.L. Gonzalez, G. Castillo. Greeks; E. Georges. Hadza; F. Marlowe. Haitians; R. Lawless. Han; Xingwu Liu. Hausa; M. Last. Hmong in Laos and the United States; K. Culhane-Pera, D. Cha, P. Kunstadter. Iroquois; B.W. Lex, T.S. Abler. Jamaican Maroons; G. Brandon. Japanese; D. Saint Arnault. Jat; S.K. Khanna. Lijiang Naxi; S. Davant White. Malagasy; J. Harper. Maori; M. Durie. Matsigenka; C. Izquierdo, G.H. Shepard Jr. Maya of Highland Mexico; E.A. Berlin, B. Berlin, J.R. Stepp. Malays; R. Provencher. Mongolian; D.J. Hruschka, B.A. Kohrt. Nahua; B.R. Huber. Navajo; J. McCloskey. Nepalese; G.G. Maskarinec. Northwest Coast; P.H. Stephenson, S. Acheson. Ojibwa; L.C. Garro. Oklahoma Choctaw; J.N. Henderson, L. Carson Henderson. Roma of the United States and Europe; A. Hartley Sutherland. Samoans; J.R. Bindon. Saraguro; R. Finerman. Shipibo; W.M. Hern. Sotho; N. Romero-Daza, D. Himmelgreen. Sudanese; R.M. Abusharaf. Thai; C. Lyttleton. Tongans; B. Burns McGrath. Trobriand; J. Bouton Crain, A.C. Darrah, L. Silipolakapulapola Digim'Rina. Tuareg; S.J. Rasmussen. Wape; W.E. Mitchell. Yanomamö; J. Kuzara, R. Hames. Yoruba; N.H. Wolff.Reviews<p>From the reviews: <p> These two volumes, by turns a review of and a reflection on medical anthropology from the 1960s onward, provide the most extensive single reference on the field as yet. (Robert L. Martensen, The New England Journal of Medicine) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |