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2.1 Physical and Mental Health

COVID-19

  • World Health Organization (WHO) and social problems

    • Health: a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being

    • The study of social problems is inherently intertwined with the study of health

    • Pandemic: a worldwide disease outbreak

  • COVID-19 is a pandemic

    • Death rate: the number of people per 100,000 in a population that die in a specific period

    • Contact tracing: focuses on identifying contacting people exposed to others with positive test results

    • Positivity rate: the percentage of positive results for every 100 tests

    • The first reported cases were identified in the Wuhan, Hubie province of China

Overview of Global Health

Classifying Countries

  • When comparing health outcomes, sociologists generally classify countries by level of economic development

    • High-income country: a country with a relatively high gross national income per capita

      • Aka “most-developed countries”

    • Middle-income country: a country with a relatively low gross national income per capita

      • Aka “less-developed countries” or “developing countries”

    • Low-income country: one of the poorest countries in the world

      • Aka “least-developed countries”

  • Figures such as life expectancy and cause of death vary significantly between countries with different levels of wealth

Key Concepts

  • Life expectancy: the average number of years that individuals born during a
    specific year can expect to live

    • Japan (84 years) versus Central African Republic (53 years)

    • Higher in high-income countries

  • Mortality: death

    • Noninfectious versus infectious disease

    • Vary globally, often correlated with a country’s level of economic development

  • Infant mortality rate: the number of deaths of infants under 1 year of age per 1,000 live births

    • Averages 4 to 48 deaths/1,000 live births around the globe

    • Under-5 mortality rate: the number of deaths of children under age 5 per 1,000 live births

    • Both of these rates are much higher in low- and middle-income countries than in high-income countries

  • Maternal mortality rate: the number of deaths from complications associated with pregnancy, childbirth, and unsafe abortion

    • More than 94% of maternal deaths occur in low-income countries

    • Lifetime risk of maternal morality by country wealth; via World Health Organization 2019b

  • Herd immunity: the point at which enough people in a population have been exposed to or immunized from an infectious agent to stop its spread

Globalization and Health

  • Globalization

    • International organizations monitor and report outbreaks of disease, disseminate guidelines for controlling and treating disease, and share medical knowledge and research findings

    • Global travel is the primary means through which illnesses are transmitted between countries

    • International trade agreements influence health

      • Access to range of goods including tobacco and processed foods

      • Globesity is a consequence of growing middle-class in poor countries

        • Globesity: the high prevalence of obesity around the world

  • Medical tourism: a global industry that involves traveling, primarily across international borders, for the purpose of obtaining medical care

  • Medical tourism takes place for three main reasons:

    • To obtain medical treatment that is not available in their home country

    • To avoid waiting periods for treatment

    • To save money on the cost of medical treatment

Applying Sociological Theories

Structural-Functionalist Perspective

  • Health care is a social institution that functions to maintain the well-being of individuals and the society

  • Failures in the health care system are dysfunctions that impact large numbers of people and other social institutions such as the economy

  • Social change impacts health, and health concerns impact social change

  • Latent dysfunctions: unintended or unrecognized consequences

    • Use of antibiotics in agriculture and the connection to antimicrobial resistance among humans

Conflict Perspective

  • Socioeconomic status or social class, power, and profit motive have an impact on illness and health care

  • Health care industrial complex

    • Powerful groups and wealthy corporations influence health-related policies and laws

    • 600 million was spent by health industry in 2019 lobbying Congress

    • Pharma corporations decide which drugs and products to develop

Symbolic Interactionist Perspective

  • Meanings, definitions, and labels influence health, illness, and health care

  • Meanings are learned through interaction with others and through media messages and portrayals

  • Society or groups come to decide and agree what social conditions are defined as illnesses or diseases

  • Medicalization: labeling behaviors and conditions as medical problems

    • Individual experiences of distress into shared experiences of illness

      • Eg. childbirth, menopause, death, etc.

Health Disparities in the United States

  • Health disparity: a preventable difference in exposure to disease or injury or in opportunities to achieve optimal health across social groups

  • Social stratification: systems of social inequality by which a society divides people into groups with unequal access to wealth, material and social resources, and power

    • Socioeconomic status or social class

      • Educational attainment, occupation, and household income

      • Low socioeconomic status and poor communities linked to:

        • Lower life expectancy and leading causal factor of poor health

        • Greater stress and fewest resources to cope

        • Hospitals more likely to be understaffed and lack life-saving equipment

        • COVID-19 deaths in U.S. are higher in low-income counties

        • Food deserts: areas that lack access to grocery stores

      • Health also affects socioeconomic status and ability to pursue education, employment training, and employment itself

    • Race/ethnicity

      • Income, education, housing, toxins, and access to healthcare

        • Black Americans, Native Americans, and Alaska Natives have lower than average health outcomes

      • COVID-19 disproportionately impacts underserved groups

        • Overcrowded and collective-living arrangements

        • Employed in essential jobs

        • Higher rates of chronic conditions

      • Hispanic Paradox

        • Hispanic cultural values promote family and community closeness, and traditional healthy diets which control for risk factors

    • Gender

      • Men have more access to social power, privileges, resources, and opportunities but lower life expectancy

        • Greater exposure to occupational hazards

        • Social norms encourage risk-taking behaviors

        • Less likely to seek health care and disclose symptoms

        • Less likely to take COVID-19 seriously and take precautions

        • Higher rates of antisocial personality disorder, and alcohol abuse

      • Women’s health is impacted by gender inequalities

        • Economic, political, and spousal inequalities

        • Higher rates of depression and anxiety

Mental Illness: The Hidden Epidemic

  • Mental health: psychological, emotional, and social well-being

  • Mental illness: all mental disorders characterized by sustained patterns of abnormal thinking, mood, or behaviors that are accompanied by significant distress and/or impairment in daily functioning

    • Stigma: a discrediting label that affects an individual’s self-concept and disqualifies that person from full social acceptance

    • Stigma surrounding mental illness is partly due to misconceptions about their causes, such as that mental illness is caused by personal weakness, or results from engaging in immoral behavior

    • The media often reinforces violent stereotypes through selective news reports and stereotypical portrayals in fictional crime shows and dramas

  • Extent and impact of mental illness

    • In 2019, nearly 1 in 5 adults had a mental illness in the past year

    • The highest prevalence was among 18- to 25-year-olds

    • About 65% received treatment

    • Almost half of adolescents (13-18) had been diagnosed with a mental disorder in their lifetime

    • Depression and anxiety are the most common in U.S. and around globe

    • Untreated mental illness has many social consequences

      • Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S. and second leading cause of death among 10- to 34-year-olds

  • Mental illness among college students

    • In 2019, 1 in 3 college students had been diagnosed or treated for a mental
      health condition in the past year

      • 24% had been diagnosed for depression

      • 22% had been diagnosed for anxiety

      • 12% had been diagnosed for panic attacks

      • More than 1 in 4 college students reported that anxiety affected their academic performance; 1 in 5 reported that depression affected their academic performance

  • Treatment of mental illness

    • Deinstitutionalization: the shift during the 1960s from in-patient care to community-based mental health centers and drug therapies

      • Legislation passed prohibiting committing people to psychiatric hospitals against their will unless they posed a danger to themselves

      • Community-based mental health centers have not adequately met mental health care needs as millions of Americans go without care

    • Criminalization of mental illness: the view that correctional facilities have replaced the mental health asylums of the past

Strategies for Action

  • Improving health in middle- and low-income countries

    • Access to adequate nutrition, clean water, and sanitation

    • Increase immunizations and distribute mosquito nets to prevent malaria

    • Provide access to quality reproductive care and family planning services

    • Provide women education and income-producing opportunities

  • Improving mental health care

    • Eliminate stigma surrounding mental illness

    • Improve access to mental health services

      • Recruit more mental health professionals

      • Improve health insurance coverage

      • Expand mental health screening

      • Make mental health screenings a standard practice reimbursed by insurance companies

    • Support the mental health needs of college students

R

2.1 Physical and Mental Health

COVID-19

  • World Health Organization (WHO) and social problems

    • Health: a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being

    • The study of social problems is inherently intertwined with the study of health

    • Pandemic: a worldwide disease outbreak

  • COVID-19 is a pandemic

    • Death rate: the number of people per 100,000 in a population that die in a specific period

    • Contact tracing: focuses on identifying contacting people exposed to others with positive test results

    • Positivity rate: the percentage of positive results for every 100 tests

    • The first reported cases were identified in the Wuhan, Hubie province of China

Overview of Global Health

Classifying Countries

  • When comparing health outcomes, sociologists generally classify countries by level of economic development

    • High-income country: a country with a relatively high gross national income per capita

      • Aka “most-developed countries”

    • Middle-income country: a country with a relatively low gross national income per capita

      • Aka “less-developed countries” or “developing countries”

    • Low-income country: one of the poorest countries in the world

      • Aka “least-developed countries”

  • Figures such as life expectancy and cause of death vary significantly between countries with different levels of wealth

Key Concepts

  • Life expectancy: the average number of years that individuals born during a
    specific year can expect to live

    • Japan (84 years) versus Central African Republic (53 years)

    • Higher in high-income countries

  • Mortality: death

    • Noninfectious versus infectious disease

    • Vary globally, often correlated with a country’s level of economic development

  • Infant mortality rate: the number of deaths of infants under 1 year of age per 1,000 live births

    • Averages 4 to 48 deaths/1,000 live births around the globe

    • Under-5 mortality rate: the number of deaths of children under age 5 per 1,000 live births

    • Both of these rates are much higher in low- and middle-income countries than in high-income countries

  • Maternal mortality rate: the number of deaths from complications associated with pregnancy, childbirth, and unsafe abortion

    • More than 94% of maternal deaths occur in low-income countries

    • Lifetime risk of maternal morality by country wealth; via World Health Organization 2019b

  • Herd immunity: the point at which enough people in a population have been exposed to or immunized from an infectious agent to stop its spread

Globalization and Health

  • Globalization

    • International organizations monitor and report outbreaks of disease, disseminate guidelines for controlling and treating disease, and share medical knowledge and research findings

    • Global travel is the primary means through which illnesses are transmitted between countries

    • International trade agreements influence health

      • Access to range of goods including tobacco and processed foods

      • Globesity is a consequence of growing middle-class in poor countries

        • Globesity: the high prevalence of obesity around the world

  • Medical tourism: a global industry that involves traveling, primarily across international borders, for the purpose of obtaining medical care

  • Medical tourism takes place for three main reasons:

    • To obtain medical treatment that is not available in their home country

    • To avoid waiting periods for treatment

    • To save money on the cost of medical treatment

Applying Sociological Theories

Structural-Functionalist Perspective

  • Health care is a social institution that functions to maintain the well-being of individuals and the society

  • Failures in the health care system are dysfunctions that impact large numbers of people and other social institutions such as the economy

  • Social change impacts health, and health concerns impact social change

  • Latent dysfunctions: unintended or unrecognized consequences

    • Use of antibiotics in agriculture and the connection to antimicrobial resistance among humans

Conflict Perspective

  • Socioeconomic status or social class, power, and profit motive have an impact on illness and health care

  • Health care industrial complex

    • Powerful groups and wealthy corporations influence health-related policies and laws

    • 600 million was spent by health industry in 2019 lobbying Congress

    • Pharma corporations decide which drugs and products to develop

Symbolic Interactionist Perspective

  • Meanings, definitions, and labels influence health, illness, and health care

  • Meanings are learned through interaction with others and through media messages and portrayals

  • Society or groups come to decide and agree what social conditions are defined as illnesses or diseases

  • Medicalization: labeling behaviors and conditions as medical problems

    • Individual experiences of distress into shared experiences of illness

      • Eg. childbirth, menopause, death, etc.

Health Disparities in the United States

  • Health disparity: a preventable difference in exposure to disease or injury or in opportunities to achieve optimal health across social groups

  • Social stratification: systems of social inequality by which a society divides people into groups with unequal access to wealth, material and social resources, and power

    • Socioeconomic status or social class

      • Educational attainment, occupation, and household income

      • Low socioeconomic status and poor communities linked to:

        • Lower life expectancy and leading causal factor of poor health

        • Greater stress and fewest resources to cope

        • Hospitals more likely to be understaffed and lack life-saving equipment

        • COVID-19 deaths in U.S. are higher in low-income counties

        • Food deserts: areas that lack access to grocery stores

      • Health also affects socioeconomic status and ability to pursue education, employment training, and employment itself

    • Race/ethnicity

      • Income, education, housing, toxins, and access to healthcare

        • Black Americans, Native Americans, and Alaska Natives have lower than average health outcomes

      • COVID-19 disproportionately impacts underserved groups

        • Overcrowded and collective-living arrangements

        • Employed in essential jobs

        • Higher rates of chronic conditions

      • Hispanic Paradox

        • Hispanic cultural values promote family and community closeness, and traditional healthy diets which control for risk factors

    • Gender

      • Men have more access to social power, privileges, resources, and opportunities but lower life expectancy

        • Greater exposure to occupational hazards

        • Social norms encourage risk-taking behaviors

        • Less likely to seek health care and disclose symptoms

        • Less likely to take COVID-19 seriously and take precautions

        • Higher rates of antisocial personality disorder, and alcohol abuse

      • Women’s health is impacted by gender inequalities

        • Economic, political, and spousal inequalities

        • Higher rates of depression and anxiety

Mental Illness: The Hidden Epidemic

  • Mental health: psychological, emotional, and social well-being

  • Mental illness: all mental disorders characterized by sustained patterns of abnormal thinking, mood, or behaviors that are accompanied by significant distress and/or impairment in daily functioning

    • Stigma: a discrediting label that affects an individual’s self-concept and disqualifies that person from full social acceptance

    • Stigma surrounding mental illness is partly due to misconceptions about their causes, such as that mental illness is caused by personal weakness, or results from engaging in immoral behavior

    • The media often reinforces violent stereotypes through selective news reports and stereotypical portrayals in fictional crime shows and dramas

  • Extent and impact of mental illness

    • In 2019, nearly 1 in 5 adults had a mental illness in the past year

    • The highest prevalence was among 18- to 25-year-olds

    • About 65% received treatment

    • Almost half of adolescents (13-18) had been diagnosed with a mental disorder in their lifetime

    • Depression and anxiety are the most common in U.S. and around globe

    • Untreated mental illness has many social consequences

      • Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S. and second leading cause of death among 10- to 34-year-olds

  • Mental illness among college students

    • In 2019, 1 in 3 college students had been diagnosed or treated for a mental
      health condition in the past year

      • 24% had been diagnosed for depression

      • 22% had been diagnosed for anxiety

      • 12% had been diagnosed for panic attacks

      • More than 1 in 4 college students reported that anxiety affected their academic performance; 1 in 5 reported that depression affected their academic performance

  • Treatment of mental illness

    • Deinstitutionalization: the shift during the 1960s from in-patient care to community-based mental health centers and drug therapies

      • Legislation passed prohibiting committing people to psychiatric hospitals against their will unless they posed a danger to themselves

      • Community-based mental health centers have not adequately met mental health care needs as millions of Americans go without care

    • Criminalization of mental illness: the view that correctional facilities have replaced the mental health asylums of the past

Strategies for Action

  • Improving health in middle- and low-income countries

    • Access to adequate nutrition, clean water, and sanitation

    • Increase immunizations and distribute mosquito nets to prevent malaria

    • Provide access to quality reproductive care and family planning services

    • Provide women education and income-producing opportunities

  • Improving mental health care

    • Eliminate stigma surrounding mental illness

    • Improve access to mental health services

      • Recruit more mental health professionals

      • Improve health insurance coverage

      • Expand mental health screening

      • Make mental health screenings a standard practice reimbursed by insurance companies

    • Support the mental health needs of college students