The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Medical Sociology. Группа авторов

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Ye is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She completed her undergraduate studies at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, China. Her main research interests lie in the areas of medical sociology, sociology of professions, health policy, and family and marriage.

      Preface

      The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Medical Sociology is a follow-up to two earlier volumes of this book and the latest work currently in Wiley Blackwell’s Companion series. The goal is to bring together leading scholars in medical sociology to provide discussion of the most important issues and review the current research in the field. This edition follows this practice by providing chapters on health-related topics of significant interest. The contributors are from Canada, China, Singapore, Sweden, the UK, and the US, who were carefully selected to write chapters on topics in which they were recognized experts.

      As will be seen in several chapters, this book was organized and written during the 2019–20 COVID-19 global pandemic. Consequently, many of these chapters take the effects of COVID-19 into account. One chapter (Chapter 21) on newly emerging diseases by Ron Barrett (Macalester College), a recipient of the Wellcome Medal from the Royal Anthropological Institute in the UK, focuses directly on COVID-19 with an authoritative account of the pandemic. Part I of this volume begins with a chapter by Terrence Hill (Texas-San Antonio), myself, Jane McLeod (Indiana University), and Fred Hafferty (Mayo Clinic). It analyzes how medical sociology’s former subfields of sociology in medicine and the sociology of medicine have changed as its subject matter has enlarged and expanded well beyond these two initial categories. Each of these co-authors addresses a particular area of contemporary research. Hill is one of the most prolific scholars in medical sociology, McLeod is Provost Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology at Indiana University and recipient of both the James R. Greenley and Leonard I. Pearlin awards for distinguished contributions to the Sociology of Mental Health, and Hafferty is a past chair of the Medical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association who is currently at the College of Medicine at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. He has spent his career as a sociologist working in medical institutions.

      Chapter 3 focuses on research methods, which is a new yet important topic for this volume. This chapter is written by Joseph Wolfe (University of Alabama at Birmingham), Shawn Bauldry (Purdue University), and Cindy Cain (University of Alabama at Birmingham) – each of whom is an experienced and well-regarded methodologist. Next is Chapter 4 on the important relationship between culture and health in a global context. Stella Quah of the Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore writes this chapter. She is past chair of the International Sociological Association (ISA) Research Council, past president of the ISA Research Committee on Health Sociology, and editor-in-chief of the 2nd edition of the International Encyclopedia of Public Health. Altogether, four past presidents of ISA’s Research Committee on Health Sociology are authors of chapters in this volume (Cockerham, Gabe, Quah, and Quesnel-Vallée). The remaining introductory chapter is on bioethics by Kristina Orfali (Columbia University) and Raymond De Vries (University of Michigan). Orfali is a Fellow of the Institute for Social and Economic Research & Policy at Columbia and DeVries is Associate Director of the Center for Bioethics and Social Sciences in Medicine at Michigan,

      The section (Part II) on theoretical approaches in medical sociology follows. Sarah Nettleton (University of York, UK) provides an update of research on the sociology of the body. Nettleton is a former senior editor of the journal Social Science & Medicine. Adele Clarke of the University of California Medical Center at San Francisco and her colleagues at U.C. San Francisco, Melanie Jeske, and Janet Shim, along with Laura Mamo at San Francisco State University reexamine biomedicalization theory in Chapter 7 on a return visit to the theory decades later. Clarke, the leading proponent of biomedicalization theory has received numerous prizes and awards from professional organizations, including the Medical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association and the Societies for Medical Anthropology, the Study of Social Sciences, and the Study of Symbolic Interaction. Next (Chapter 8) is an update of health lifestyle theory by the editor with a focus on the significance of social structures in influencing the health-related behavior of individuals. This chapter is followed by a new chapter on life course theory by Andrea Willson and Kim Shuey of the University of Western Ontario in Canada. They have published substantial work in this area. Chapter 10 takes the next journey into theory with a chapter by Lijun Song and Yvonne Chin (Vanderbilt University) on social capital and health. Song is a former student of Nan Lin, a major figure in social capital theory who co-authored a chapter on social capital with her in earlier versions of this book.

      In Part IV, the emphasis is on health and various types of social relationships. Chapter 17 is on health and family, which is a new but highly significant topic for this volume. It is written by Mieke Thomeer and Kirsten Ostergren Clark of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Thomeer is Deputy Editor of the Journal of Marriage and Family, on the editorial board of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior, and is Teaching Committee Chair for the American Sociological Association’s Medical Sociology Section. Chapter 18 is an updated chapter on health and religion by the well-known scholar Ellen Idler (Emory University). She is the Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Sociology at Emory and Director of the Religion and Public Health Collaborative. She also is a Fellow and past chair of the Behavioral and Social Sciences Section of the Gerontological Society of America and the American Sociological Association’s Section on Aging and the Life Course.

      Next is a chapter (Chapter 19) on health and migration by a new scholar Elyas Bakhtiari (College of William & Mary) that investigates the increasingly important topic of the health of migrants by an expert on this topic. The section concludes with a chapter on another new subject for this volume, that of mental health, by Teresa Scheid (University of North Carolina-Charlotte). She is a well-known researcher in the sociology of mental health and a senior editor with Eric Wright of the third edition of the Handbook for the Study of Mental Health: Social Contexts, Theories, and Systems.

      Part V contains

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