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Unequal Health: How Inequality Contributes to Health or Illness

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This book introduces students and researchers to the wealth of scientific information about health disparities among Americans. While the scientific research has burgeoned in recent years, the results are upsetting some firmly fixed beliefs regarding what people can or should do to improve their health.

Unequal Health contrasts popular beliefs about the relevance of such factors as sex, race, poverty, and health habits with research on those factors reported in the scientific literature. Budrys extends her analysis to more complicated topics, namely, access to medical care, genetics, and stress. The final chapters of the book switch from a focus on the health of individuals to the health profile of whole populations. These chapters deal with research on the relationship between social inequality and health status—generally identified as social epidemiology or the study of population health.

Budrys' synthesis of key research challenges basic tenets of the American belief system that promote the idea that all of us could improve our health significantly if we simply chose to do so. Her books shows health and well-being in America are directly tied to economic status—a relationship that extends well beyond obvious explanations related to poverty.

Paperback

First published July 21, 2003

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Grace Budrys

11 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Megi wants to live in a Library..
50 reviews4 followers
July 20, 2018
Not what I expected. The book provided rather superficial, broad, and ambiguous information on health inequality. The reading level was not very difficult and the style, dry. Not a bad book by any means but I was expecting a more comprehensive, non-layman discussion on health inequality.
Profile Image for Hilary.
4 reviews1 follower
April 12, 2011
This book wasn't what I expected, but I feel like it would be great to use in an undergraduate class on medical sociology of social epidemiology.
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