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Social medicine

Social medicine is an interdisciplinary field that focuses on the profound interplay between socio-economic factors and individual health outcomes. Rooted in the challenges of the Industrial Revolution, it seeks to:

  1. Understand how specific social, economic, and environmental conditions directly impact health, disease, and the delivery of medical care.
  2. Promote conditions and interventions that address these determinants, aiming for a healthier and more equitable society.
A group of Chilean 'Damas de Rojo', volunteers on their local hospital and an example of social medicine

Social medicine as a scientific field gradually began in the early 19th century, the Industrial Revolution and the subsequent increase in poverty and disease among workers raised concerns about the effect of social processes on the health of the poor. The field of social medicine is most commonly addressed today by efforts to understand what are known as social determinants of health.[1]

Scope Edit

The major emphasis on biomedical science in medical education,[2] health care, and medical research has resulted into a gap with our understanding and acknowledgement of far more important social determinants of health and individual disease: social-economic inequalities, war, illiteracy, detrimental life-styles (smoking, obesity), discrimination because of race, gender and religion. Farmer et al. (2006) gave the following explanation for this gap:[3]

The holy grail of modern medicine remains the search for a molecular basis of disease. While the practical yield of such circumscribed inquiry has been enormous, exclusive focus on molecular-level phenomena has contributed to the increasing "desocialization" of scientific inquiry: a tendency to ask only biological questions about what are in fact biosocial phenomena.

They further concluded that "Biosocial understandings of medical phenomena are urgently needed".[3]

Social medicine is a vast and evolving field, and its scope can cover a wide range of topics that touch on the intersection of society and health. The scope of social medicine medicine includes:

  1. Social Determinants of Health: Investigation of how factors like income, education, employment, race, gender, housing, and social support impact health outcomes.
  2. Health Equity and Disparities: Studying the disparities in health outcomes among different groups based on racial, economic, gender, or other sociodemographic factors and creating strategies to promote equal health opportunities for all.
  3. Health Systems and Policies: Evaluating how different healthcare systems, structures, and policies impact health outcomes. This includes assessing the effectiveness of public health campaigns, insurance models, and health-related legislation.
  4. Environmental Health: Understanding how environmental factors such as pollution, climate change, and access to clean water and sanitation affect health.
  5. Global Health: Addressing health concerns that transcend national borders, such as epidemics, pandemics, or the health impacts of globalization.
  6. Cultural Competency: Training healthcare professionals to understand and respect cultural differences in patient care. This involves understanding diverse health beliefs, values, and behaviors.
  7. Migration and Health: Studying the health implications of migration, whether it's due to conflict, economic reasons, or other factors. This includes looking at issues like refugee health, healthcare access for undocumented migrants, and more.
  8. Urbanization and Health: Analyzing the impact of urban living conditions, urban development, and city policies on health.
  9. Mental Health: Delving into how social factors like stigma, discrimination, social isolation, and traumatic events impact mental health and well-being.
  10. Violence and Health: Investigating the health implications of different forms of violence, including domestic violence, community violence, and structural violence, and developing strategies to prevent and address these impacts.
  11. Occupational Health: Examining the health impacts of different work environments, job roles, and organizational structures.
  12. Substance Use and Addiction: Analyzing the social determinants and implications of substance use, including policies and societal attitudes toward different substances.
  13. Community Engagement and Empowerment: Working with communities to identify their health needs, co-create interventions, and mobilize resources to promote health.
  14. Medical Education: Integrating social medicine topics into medical curricula to ensure that healthcare professionals are equipped to address the social aspects of health and illness.
  15. Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Working with professionals from diverse fields, such as anthropology, sociology, economics, and urban planning, to address complex health challenges.

Comparison with Public Health Edit

While there is some overlap between social medicine and public health , there are distinctions between the two fields. Distinct from public health, which concentrates on the health of entire populations and encompasses broad strategies for disease prevention and health promotion, social medicine dives deeper into the societal structures and conditions that lead to health disparities among different groups. Its approach is often more qualitative, honing in on the lived experiences of individuals within their social contexts. While public health might launch broad-spectrum interventions like vaccination campaigns or sanitation drives, social medicine probes the underlying socio-economic reasons why certain communities might be disproportionately affected by health challenges. The ultimate goal of social medicine is to ensure that societal structures support the health of all members, particularly those most vulnerable or marginalized.

  1. Social Medicine:
    • Focus: Primarily on the socio-economic factors that affect health and how these can be addressed to promote better health outcomes.
    • Approach: It delves deeper into the relationship between society and individual health. This includes the impacts of discrimination, inequality, poverty, and other social determinants.
    • Historical Context: Originated during the Industrial Revolution as a response to the health challenges faced by the working class due to industrialization.
    • Goal: To use the understanding of socio-economic factors to influence healthcare practices and policy to bring about a healthier society.
  2. Public Health:
    • Focus: On the health of the general population, aiming to prevent disease and promote health at a community or population level.
    • Approach: It encompasses a broader set of tools and strategies, ranging from disease surveillance, health education, policy recommendations, and health promotion initiatives.
    • Historical Context: Has its roots in controlling infectious diseases, ensuring clean water and sanitation, and other community-wide health initiatives.
    • Goal: To improve health outcomes through community interventions, policy, and education, often utilizing epidemiological studies and data analysis.

To visualize the difference: Imagine a city facing an outbreak of a disease. A public health approach might involve vaccination campaigns, public health advisories, and quarantine measures. A social medicine approach might delve into why certain communities within the city are more affected than others, looking at housing conditions, employment status, racial or socio-economic discrimination, and other societal factors, and then proposing solutions based on these insights.

Both fields recognize the importance of the social determinants of health but approach the topic from slightly different angles and with varying emphases. In practice, there's a lot of collaboration and overlap between social medicine and public health, as both are essential for a holistic approach to health and wellness.

Social care Edit

Social care aims to promote wellness and emphasizes preventive, ameliorative, and maintenance efforts during illness, impairment, or disability. It adopts a holistic perspective on health and encompasses a variety of practices and viewpoints aimed at disease prevention and reduction of the economic, social, and psychological burdens associated with prolonged illnesses and diseases.[4] The social model was developed as a direct response to the medical model, the social model sees barriers (physical, attitudinal and behavioural) not just as a biomedical issue, but as caused in part by the society we live in – as a product of the physical, organizational and social worlds that lead to discrimination (Oliver 1996; French 1993; Oliver and Barnes 1993). Social care advocates equality of opportunities for vulnerable sections of society.[5]

History Edit

German physician Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902) laid foundations for this model. Other prominent figures in the history of social medicine, beginning from the 20th century, include Salvador Allende, Henry E. Sigerist, Thomas McKeown,[6] Victor W. Sidel,[7] Howard Waitzkin, and more recently Paul Farmer[8] and Jim Yong Kim.

In The Second Sickness, Waitzkin traces the history of social medicine from Engels, through Virchow and Allende.[9] Waitzkin has sought to educate North Americans about the contributions of Latin American Social Medicine.[10][11]

In 1976, the British public health scientist and health care critic Thomas McKeown, MD, published "The role of medicine: Dream, mirage or nemesis?", wherein he summarized facts and arguments that supported what became known as McKeown's thesis, i.e. that the growth of population can be attributed to a decline in mortality from infectious diseases, primarily thanks to better nutrition, later also to better hygiene, and only marginally and late to medical interventions such as antibiotics and vaccines.[12] McKeown was heavily criticized for his controversial ideas, but is nowadays remembered as "the founder of social medicine".[13]

Occupational Health & Social Medicine Edit

The world of work played a fundamental role in the development of a social approach to health during the first industrial revolution, as exemplified by Virchow’s work on typhus and coal miners.[14] Over the past 50 years, Occupational Safety and Health.[15]  The resulting distinction between work/nonwork related risks and outcomes has served as an artificial line of demarcation between OSH and the rest of public health.[16] However, growing social inequality, the fundamental reorganization of the world of work,[17]  and a broadening of our understanding of the relationship between work and health[18] have blurred this line of demarcation and highlight the need to expand and compliment the reductionist view of cause and effect.  In response, OSH is reintegrating a social approach to account for the social, political, and economic interactions that contribute to occupational health outcomes.[19]  

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Trout L, Kramer C, Fischer L (Dec 2018). "Social Medicine in Practice". Health and Human Rights. 20 (2): 19–30. PMC 6293359. PMID 30568399.
  2. ^ Hixon, Allen L.; Yamada, Seiji; Farmer, Paul E.; Maskarinec, Gregory G. (2013-01-16). "Social justice: The heart of medical education". Social Medicine. 7 (3): 161–168. ISSN 1557-7112.
  3. ^ a b Farmer, Paul, Bruce Nizeye, Sarah Stulac, and Salmaan Keshavjee (2006). "Structural violence and clinical medicine". PLOS Medicine. v.3(10): e449 (10): e449. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030449. PMC 1621099. PMID 17076568.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Lowy, Louis (1979). Social Work with the Aging: The Challenge and Promise of the Later Years. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-044085-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  5. ^ Kieran Walshe; Judith Smith (1 September 2011). Healthcare Management. McGraw-Hill Education (UK). pp. 261+. ISBN 978-0-335-24382-2.
  6. ^ McKeown, Thomas and Lowe, C. R. (1966). An Introduction to Social Medicine. Oxford and Edinburgh: Blackwell Scientific Publications.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Anderson, Matthew; Smith, Clyde Lanford (Lanny) (2013-11-03). "Honoring Vic Sidel". Social Medicine. 7 (3): 117–119. ISSN 1557-7112.
  8. ^ Farmer, Paul (2002). Social medicine and the challenge of biosocial research. In: Opolka U, Schoop H (editors): Innovative Structures in Basic Research: Ringberg-Symposium, 4–7 October 2000. München: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft. pp. 55–73.
  9. ^ Howard., Waitzkin (2000). The second sickness : contradictions of capitalist health care (Rev. and updated ed.). Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780847698875. OCLC 42295890.
  10. ^ Waitzkin, Howard; Iriart, Celia; Estrada, Alfredo; Lamadrid, Silvia (2001-10-01). "Social Medicine Then and Now: Lessons From Latin America". American Journal of Public Health. 91 (10): 1592–1601. doi:10.2105/AJPH.91.10.1592. ISSN 0090-0036. PMC 1446835. PMID 11574316.
  11. ^ Waitzkin, Howard; Iriart, Celia; Estrada, Alfredo; Lamadrid, Silvia (2001-07-28). "Social medicine in Latin America: productivity and dangers facing the major national groups". The Lancet. 358 (9278): 315–323. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(01)05488-5. ISSN 0140-6736. PMID 11498235. S2CID 38877645.
  12. ^ McKeown, Thomas (1976). The Role of Medicine: Dream, Mirage or Nemesis? (The Rock Carlington Fellow, 1976). London, UK: Nuffield Provincial Hospital Trust. ISBN 978-0-900574-24-5.
  13. ^ Deaton, Angus (2013). The Great Escape. Health, wealth, and the origins of inequality. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. pp. 91–93. ISBN 978-0-691-15354-4. McKeown's views, updated to modern circumstances, are still important today in debates between those who think that health is primarily determined by medical discoveries and medical treatment and those who look to the background social conditions of life.
  14. ^ "NIOSH eNews - Volume 18, Number 10 (February 2021)". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2022-05-13. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
  15. ^ Albert, Farre (December 2017). "The New Old (and Old New) Medical Model: Four Decades Navigating the Biomedical and Psychosocial Understandings of Health and Illness". Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland). 5 (4): 88. doi:10.3390/healthcare5040088. PMC 5746722. PMID 29156540.
  16. ^ "Annals of Work Exposures and Health". OUP Academic. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
  17. ^ Tamers, Sara (September 14, 2020). "Envisioning the future of work to safeguard the safety, health, and well-being of the workforce: A perspective from the CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health". American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 63 (12): 1065–1084. doi:10.1002/ajim.23183.
  18. ^ Ahonen, Emily (January 2018). "Work as an Inclusive Part of Population Health Inequities Research and Prevention". American Journal of Public Health. 108 (3): 306–311. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2017.304214. PMC 5803801. PMID 29345994.
  19. ^ Flynn, Micheal (2021). "Health Equity and a Paradigm Shift in Occupational Safety and Health". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 19 (1): 349. doi:10.3390/ijerph19010349. PMC 8744812. PMID 35010608.
Bibliography
  • Social Medicine: http://journals.sfu.ca/socialmedicine/index.php/socialmedicine/index
  • Social Medicine Portal: http://www.socialmedicine.org/
  • Porter D (2006). "How Did Social Medicine Evolve, and Where Is It Heading?". PLOS Med. 3 (10): e399. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030399. PMC 1621092. PMID 17076552.
  • Matthew R. Anderson, Lanny Smith, and Victor W. Sidel. What is Social Medicine? Monthly Review: 56(8). http://www.monthlyreview.org/0105anderson.htm
  • King NMP, Strauss RP, Churchill LR, Estroff SE, Henderson GE, et al. editors (2005) Patients, doctors, and illness. Volume I: The social medicine reader 2nd edition Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Henderson GE, Estroff SE, Churchill LR, King NMP, Oberlander J, et al. editors (2005) Social and cultural contributions to health, difference, and inequality. Volume II: The social medicine reader 2nd edition Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Oberlander J, Churchill LR, Estroff SE, Henderson GE, King NMP, et al. editors (2005) Health policy, markets, and medicine. Volume III: The social medicine reader 2nd edition Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Porter D, Porter R (1988). "What was social medicine? An historiographical essay". J Hist Sociol. 1 (1): 90–106. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6443.1988.tb00005.x. PMID 11617341.
  • Stonington S, Holmes SM (2006). "Social medicine in the twenty-first century". PLOS Med. 3 (10): e445. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0030445. PMC 1621097. PMID 17523252.

External links Edit

  • Introduction to the journal: Social Medicine
  • What is social medicine?

social, medicine, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, template, message,. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Social medicine is an interdisciplinary field that focuses on the profound interplay between socio economic factors and individual health outcomes Rooted in the challenges of the Industrial Revolution it seeks to Understand how specific social economic and environmental conditions directly impact health disease and the delivery of medical care Promote conditions and interventions that address these determinants aiming for a healthier and more equitable society A group of Chilean Damas de Rojo volunteers on their local hospital and an example of social medicine Social medicine as a scientific field gradually began in the early 19th century the Industrial Revolution and the subsequent increase in poverty and disease among workers raised concerns about the effect of social processes on the health of the poor The field of social medicine is most commonly addressed today by efforts to understand what are known as social determinants of health 1 Contents 1 Scope 2 Comparison with Public Health 3 Social care 4 History 5 Occupational Health amp Social Medicine 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksScope EditThe major emphasis on biomedical science in medical education 2 health care and medical research has resulted into a gap with our understanding and acknowledgement of far more important social determinants of health and individual disease social economic inequalities war illiteracy detrimental life styles smoking obesity discrimination because of race gender and religion Farmer et al 2006 gave the following explanation for this gap 3 The holy grail of modern medicine remains the search for a molecular basis of disease While the practical yield of such circumscribed inquiry has been enormous exclusive focus on molecular level phenomena has contributed to the increasing desocialization of scientific inquiry a tendency to ask only biological questions about what are in fact biosocial phenomena They further concluded that Biosocial understandings of medical phenomena are urgently needed 3 Social medicine is a vast and evolving field and its scope can cover a wide range of topics that touch on the intersection of society and health The scope of social medicine medicine includes Social Determinants of Health Investigation of how factors like income education employment race gender housing and social support impact health outcomes Health Equity and Disparities Studying the disparities in health outcomes among different groups based on racial economic gender or other sociodemographic factors and creating strategies to promote equal health opportunities for all Health Systems and Policies Evaluating how different healthcare systems structures and policies impact health outcomes This includes assessing the effectiveness of public health campaigns insurance models and health related legislation Environmental Health Understanding how environmental factors such as pollution climate change and access to clean water and sanitation affect health Global Health Addressing health concerns that transcend national borders such as epidemics pandemics or the health impacts of globalization Cultural Competency Training healthcare professionals to understand and respect cultural differences in patient care This involves understanding diverse health beliefs values and behaviors Migration and Health Studying the health implications of migration whether it s due to conflict economic reasons or other factors This includes looking at issues like refugee health healthcare access for undocumented migrants and more Urbanization and Health Analyzing the impact of urban living conditions urban development and city policies on health Mental Health Delving into how social factors like stigma discrimination social isolation and traumatic events impact mental health and well being Violence and Health Investigating the health implications of different forms of violence including domestic violence community violence and structural violence and developing strategies to prevent and address these impacts Occupational Health Examining the health impacts of different work environments job roles and organizational structures Substance Use and Addiction Analyzing the social determinants and implications of substance use including policies and societal attitudes toward different substances Community Engagement and Empowerment Working with communities to identify their health needs co create interventions and mobilize resources to promote health Medical Education Integrating social medicine topics into medical curricula to ensure that healthcare professionals are equipped to address the social aspects of health and illness Interdisciplinary Collaboration Working with professionals from diverse fields such as anthropology sociology economics and urban planning to address complex health challenges Comparison with Public Health EditWhile there is some overlap between social medicine and public health there are distinctions between the two fields Distinct from public health which concentrates on the health of entire populations and encompasses broad strategies for disease prevention and health promotion social medicine dives deeper into the societal structures and conditions that lead to health disparities among different groups Its approach is often more qualitative honing in on the lived experiences of individuals within their social contexts While public health might launch broad spectrum interventions like vaccination campaigns or sanitation drives social medicine probes the underlying socio economic reasons why certain communities might be disproportionately affected by health challenges The ultimate goal of social medicine is to ensure that societal structures support the health of all members particularly those most vulnerable or marginalized Social Medicine Focus Primarily on the socio economic factors that affect health and how these can be addressed to promote better health outcomes Approach It delves deeper into the relationship between society and individual health This includes the impacts of discrimination inequality poverty and other social determinants Historical Context Originated during the Industrial Revolution as a response to the health challenges faced by the working class due to industrialization Goal To use the understanding of socio economic factors to influence healthcare practices and policy to bring about a healthier society Public Health Focus On the health of the general population aiming to prevent disease and promote health at a community or population level Approach It encompasses a broader set of tools and strategies ranging from disease surveillance health education policy recommendations and health promotion initiatives Historical Context Has its roots in controlling infectious diseases ensuring clean water and sanitation and other community wide health initiatives Goal To improve health outcomes through community interventions policy and education often utilizing epidemiological studies and data analysis To visualize the difference Imagine a city facing an outbreak of a disease A public health approach might involve vaccination campaigns public health advisories and quarantine measures A social medicine approach might delve into why certain communities within the city are more affected than others looking at housing conditions employment status racial or socio economic discrimination and other societal factors and then proposing solutions based on these insights Both fields recognize the importance of the social determinants of health but approach the topic from slightly different angles and with varying emphases In practice there s a lot of collaboration and overlap between social medicine and public health as both are essential for a holistic approach to health and wellness Social care EditSocial care aims to promote wellness and emphasizes preventive ameliorative and maintenance efforts during illness impairment or disability It adopts a holistic perspective on health and encompasses a variety of practices and viewpoints aimed at disease prevention and reduction of the economic social and psychological burdens associated with prolonged illnesses and diseases 4 The social model was developed as a direct response to the medical model the social model sees barriers physical attitudinal and behavioural not just as a biomedical issue but as caused in part by the society we live in as a product of the physical organizational and social worlds that lead to discrimination Oliver 1996 French 1993 Oliver and Barnes 1993 Social care advocates equality of opportunities for vulnerable sections of society 5 History EditGerman physician Rudolf Virchow 1821 1902 laid foundations for this model Other prominent figures in the history of social medicine beginning from the 20th century include Salvador Allende Henry E Sigerist Thomas McKeown 6 Victor W Sidel 7 Howard Waitzkin and more recently Paul Farmer 8 and Jim Yong Kim In The Second Sickness Waitzkin traces the history of social medicine from Engels through Virchow and Allende 9 Waitzkin has sought to educate North Americans about the contributions of Latin American Social Medicine 10 11 In 1976 the British public health scientist and health care critic Thomas McKeown MD published The role of medicine Dream mirage or nemesis wherein he summarized facts and arguments that supported what became known as McKeown s thesis i e that the growth of population can be attributed to a decline in mortality from infectious diseases primarily thanks to better nutrition later also to better hygiene and only marginally and late to medical interventions such as antibiotics and vaccines 12 McKeown was heavily criticized for his controversial ideas but is nowadays remembered as the founder of social medicine 13 Occupational Health amp Social Medicine EditThe world of work played a fundamental role in the development of a social approach to health during the first industrial revolution as exemplified by Virchow s work on typhus and coal miners 14 Over the past 50 years Occupational Safety and Health 15 The resulting distinction between work nonwork related risks and outcomes has served as an artificial line of demarcation between OSH and the rest of public health 16 However growing social inequality the fundamental reorganization of the world of work 17 and a broadening of our understanding of the relationship between work and health 18 have blurred this line of demarcation and highlight the need to expand and compliment the reductionist view of cause and effect In response OSH is reintegrating a social approach to account for the social political and economic interactions that contribute to occupational health outcomes 19 See also EditEpidemiology Medical anthropology Medical sociology Social determinants of health in poverty Social epidemiology Social psychology Socialized medicine Society for Social MedicineReferences Edit Trout L Kramer C Fischer L Dec 2018 Social Medicine in Practice Health and Human Rights 20 2 19 30 PMC 6293359 PMID 30568399 Hixon Allen L Yamada Seiji Farmer Paul E Maskarinec Gregory G 2013 01 16 Social justice The heart of medical education Social Medicine 7 3 161 168 ISSN 1557 7112 a b Farmer Paul Bruce Nizeye Sarah Stulac and Salmaan Keshavjee 2006 Structural violence and clinical medicine PLOS Medicine v 3 10 e449 10 e449 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 0030449 PMC 1621099 PMID 17076568 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lowy Louis 1979 Social Work with the Aging The Challenge and Promise of the Later Years New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 044085 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Kieran Walshe Judith Smith 1 September 2011 Healthcare Management McGraw Hill Education UK pp 261 ISBN 978 0 335 24382 2 McKeown Thomas and Lowe C R 1966 An Introduction to Social Medicine Oxford and Edinburgh Blackwell Scientific Publications a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Anderson Matthew Smith Clyde Lanford Lanny 2013 11 03 Honoring Vic Sidel Social Medicine 7 3 117 119 ISSN 1557 7112 Farmer Paul 2002 Social medicine and the challenge of biosocial research In Opolka U Schoop H editors Innovative Structures in Basic Research Ringberg Symposium 4 7 October 2000 Munchen Max Planck Gesellschaft pp 55 73 Howard Waitzkin 2000 The second sickness contradictions of capitalist health care Rev and updated ed Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780847698875 OCLC 42295890 Waitzkin Howard Iriart Celia Estrada Alfredo Lamadrid Silvia 2001 10 01 Social Medicine Then and Now Lessons From Latin America American Journal of Public Health 91 10 1592 1601 doi 10 2105 AJPH 91 10 1592 ISSN 0090 0036 PMC 1446835 PMID 11574316 Waitzkin Howard Iriart Celia Estrada Alfredo Lamadrid Silvia 2001 07 28 Social medicine in Latin America productivity and dangers facing the major national groups The Lancet 358 9278 315 323 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 01 05488 5 ISSN 0140 6736 PMID 11498235 S2CID 38877645 McKeown Thomas 1976 The Role of Medicine Dream Mirage or Nemesis The Rock Carlington Fellow 1976 London UK Nuffield Provincial Hospital Trust ISBN 978 0 900574 24 5 Deaton Angus 2013 The Great Escape Health wealth and the origins of inequality Princeton and Oxford Princeton University Press pp 91 93 ISBN 978 0 691 15354 4 McKeown s views updated to modern circumstances are still important today in debates between those who think that health is primarily determined by medical discoveries and medical treatment and those who look to the background social conditions of life NIOSH eNews Volume 18 Number 10 February 2021 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2022 05 13 Retrieved 2023 06 13 Albert Farre December 2017 The New Old and Old New Medical Model Four Decades Navigating the Biomedical and Psychosocial Understandings of Health and Illness Healthcare Basel Switzerland 5 4 88 doi 10 3390 healthcare5040088 PMC 5746722 PMID 29156540 Annals of Work Exposures and Health OUP Academic Retrieved 2023 06 13 Tamers Sara September 14 2020 Envisioning the future of work to safeguard the safety health and well being of the workforce A perspective from the CDC s National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health American Journal of Industrial Medicine 63 12 1065 1084 doi 10 1002 ajim 23183 Ahonen Emily January 2018 Work as an Inclusive Part of Population Health Inequities Research and Prevention American Journal of Public Health 108 3 306 311 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2017 304214 PMC 5803801 PMID 29345994 Flynn Micheal 2021 Health Equity and a Paradigm Shift in Occupational Safety and Health International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19 1 349 doi 10 3390 ijerph19010349 PMC 8744812 PMID 35010608 BibliographySocial Medicine http journals sfu ca socialmedicine index php socialmedicine index Social Medicine Portal http www socialmedicine org Porter D 2006 How Did Social Medicine Evolve and Where Is It Heading PLOS Med 3 10 e399 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 0030399 PMC 1621092 PMID 17076552 Matthew R Anderson Lanny Smith and Victor W Sidel What is Social Medicine Monthly Review 56 8 http www monthlyreview org 0105anderson htm King NMP Strauss RP Churchill LR Estroff SE Henderson GE et al editors 2005 Patients doctors and illness Volume I The social medicine reader 2nd edition Durham Duke University Press Henderson GE Estroff SE Churchill LR King NMP Oberlander J et al editors 2005 Social and cultural contributions to health difference and inequality Volume II The social medicine reader 2nd edition Durham Duke University Press Oberlander J Churchill LR Estroff SE Henderson GE King NMP et al editors 2005 Health policy markets and medicine Volume III The social medicine reader 2nd edition Durham Duke University Press Porter D Porter R 1988 What was social medicine An historiographical essay J Hist Sociol 1 1 90 106 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6443 1988 tb00005 x PMID 11617341 Stonington S Holmes SM 2006 Social medicine in the twenty first century PLOS Med 3 10 e445 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 0030445 PMC 1621097 PMID 17523252 External links EditIntroduction to the journal Social Medicine What is social medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social medicine amp oldid 1176893177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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