Contemporary Health Studies. Louise Warwick-Booth

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Contemporary Health Studies - Louise Warwick-Booth страница 16

Contemporary Health Studies - Louise Warwick-Booth

Скачать книгу

Learning task 1.1

       Defining health

       Statement:

      Health is one of those things that most people assume they understand. But if we just stop and consider it for a moment and try to focus on it, it starts to float about in our minds (Johnson, 2007: 45)

      Reflect on your own understanding of what ‘health’ is. Think about the following:

      1 What does the word ‘health’ mean to you?

      2 What does it mean to you, to be ‘healthy’?

      3 Can you come up with a definition that captures what you mean by ‘health’? If you can, try not to focus on this in terms of health as being only the absence of disease (or there being something ‘wrong’).

      Write your ideas down and you can refer back them as you read this chapter.

      Health can be viewed positively or negatively. Green et al. (2019) refer to this as dichotomous differences in approaches to defining health. On the one hand there are positive approaches to defining health (health as well-being or as an asset) and on the other hand there are more negative definitions of health – those that are illness or disease oriented. When health is viewed in a negative way, definitions will tend to focus on health as absence of disease. When health is viewed in a more positive way definitions tend to be broader and take into account concepts such as ‘well-being’. The World Health Organization definition outlined earlier is an example of a more positive definition and marks a shift in understanding away from a more narrow, medical and negative view of health.

      Definitions of health can also focus on different aspects of health. Some are idealistic, as in the WHO definition offered earlier. Some definitions have a more functional view of health, where it is seen as the ability to be able to ‘do’ things and get on with life. Other definitions centre on the idea of health as a commodity. For example Aggleton (1990) argues that health is something that can be bought (by investment in private health care) or sold (through health food shops), given (by medical intervention) or lost (through disease or injury). The parallels with contemporary consumerism are evident in this type of definition and Bambra et al. (2005) note how, under capitalist systems, health has become increasingly commodified.

      Other types of definitions draw on the idea that health is about being able to cope and adapt to different circumstances and achieve personal potential and may be more aligned with ideas from humanism. Drawing on humanist ideas, health might also be considered as self-actualization and many modern concepts of health acknowledge aspects of self-realization and self-fulfilment for the individual as important for subjective health (Svalastog et al., 2017). Such notions link with the idea of empowerment, a concept discussed in more detail later in this book. Health might enable the process of self-actualization or the attainment of health might constitute self-actualization. Either way, research appears to show that this is an important idea that has implications for health and, specifically, health-promoting behaviours (Acton and Malathum, 2008). Seedhouse (2001) described health as the ‘foundations for achievement’. In keeping with the position of this chapter Seedhouse starts from the point of acknowledging that health is a complex and contested concept. Seedhouse views health as the means by which we achieve our potential, both as individuals and as groups. Seedhouse (2001) therefore describes a person’s optimum state of health as being ‘equivalent to the set of conditions that enable a person to work to fulfil her realistic chosen and biological potentials’. This perspective also broadens understandings of health beyond the absence of disease or ‘abnormality’ as understood using a medical model (this will be discussed in more detail later in the chapter). Someone may be, for example, encountering disease or be disabled and still lay claim to health, thus challenging assumptions of a ‘normality’ of health. As Blaxter (1990: 35) argued, ‘health is not, in the minds of most people, a unitary concept. It is multi-dimensional, and it is quite possible to have “good” health in one respect, but “bad” in another’.

      

Скачать книгу