While Shelley Taylor's Health Psychology 10th edition does have some good information in it, there are aspects of it that are harmfully biased, privileged, and ill-informed.
Examples of this harmful bias include the author's perspective on chronic illness being a "break or vacation from life and an excuse to avoid responsibilities" (as though people living with illness regularly have maids, nannies, and friends/family who do everything for them and don't have to continue keeping up with their responsibilities AS WELL AS dealing with their illness) and she suggests that "patients are abusing clinical care by waiting to go in until it becomes too difficult to ignore" which offers no consideration for institutional and/or financial limitations, inability to take off work for appointments, lack of insurance, lack of access, systemic racism, or any of the other situations that may contribute to people putting off appointments.
For a book that is intended to teach students about the psychological perspectives of people experiencing acute, chronic, or terminal illness it is severely lacking in compassion and awareness of the variables and limitations that go along with living with and/or trying to survive on a lower income with such illnesses.
Students should NOT be learning from this book as it will only serve to perpetuate already problematic stigmas and bias.