SOCY200 Final Exam
"Race"
A social construction based on external physical characteristics (such as skin colour)
Feminist Theory
A theoretical approach that views patriarchal structures in society, including in the family, the workplace, and other social institutions, as the cause of lack of gender equality and, consequently, of numerous social problems
Intersectionality
A theoretical understanding that individuals and groups of people cannot be defined and understood by only one characteristic of their identity (such as gender, race, or income status), but that various identities are dynamically entwine
Cumulative Advantage Theory
A theory that points to the importance of early life experience of advantage (generally, of socio-economic advantage)
Population Pyramid
A type of graph portraying a population by age and gender, with the younger ages at the bottom and, conventionally, males on the left hand and females on the right
Commodification
A view of health and the provision of health care as a commodity to which cost-benefit analyses can be applied, as espoused by many health administrators and by those in the for-profit health services sector
Neo-Materialist Approach
A view of inequality and health that considers the importance of adequate material resources but then acknowledges the importance of the relative distribution of material and social goods within a society as a critical factor in subsequent health outcomes
Resilience
Ability to respond to challenges (such as loss of loved one or a serious accident or diagnosis) in ways that are helpful to ones well being
Stress
Adverse physiological and/or psychological manifestations that result from demands in the individual's environment (natural, work, family, interpersonal, financial, etc) that are greater than one usually experiences or is able to cope with over an extended period of time
E-waste
All of the waste that results from the rapid obsolescent of electronic equipment such as computers, cell phones, and associated products
Materialist Approach
An approach to the social determinants of health that focuses on how health is impacted by the extent to which people can access such materials things as adequate and nutritious food and good housing
Symbolic Interactionist/Interpretive/Social Constructionist Theor
An approach to understanding society that focuses on meaning-making and discourses of social life
Phenomenological
Analytical and descriptive, focusing on direct personal experience and consciousness
Morbidity
Being or feeling sick to the point of being unable to do and accomplish all that one normally would on a daily or weekly basis
BBC Chain
Biography, Body, and self-Conception: an approach to understanding how people cope with chronic illness affecting the body by modifying or "rewriting" their personal biographies and their conceptions of self
Microaggressions
Casual and seemingly minor slurs, slights, and interpersonal assumptions directed towards radicalized people
Life Course Transitions
Changes in status over a lifetime (such as beginning and ending different levels and types of schooling, getting married or divorced, being widowed, and so on
Climate Change
Changes in temperature and weather patterns resulting from the emission of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere (Consequences include rising sea levels, flooding, thawing of the tundra, and other extreme events)
Ethnicity
Characteristics of a group of people because of shared cultural background (including such factors as religion, family patterns, and language
Social Inclusion
Characteristics of communities (such as civic engagement, voter turnout, and the representation of people of diverse backgrounds in positions of power in local governments and community organizations) that allow people of different backgrounds and incomes to feel part of and to participate in the larger community
Pathologized
Conceptualized as problematic and/or needing medical treatment
Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products (PPCPs)
Cosmetic and over-the-counter medicines that can have a negative impact on the health of consumers and that are harmful to the environment in their production and/or disposal
Diseases of Civilization
Diseases that result from lifestyle behaviours and social determinants of health rather than from the lack of clean water, ample food, and the like. They tend to occur later in life
Pathway Effects
Early experiences of equity or inequity that set a person on a course towards better or poorer health
Greenhouse Gases (GHGs)
Gases emitted on earth (mostly due to the burning of fossil fuels and the methane resulting from intensive 'factory' farming of animals) that absorb and reflect radiation, trapping heat in the atmosphere to cause global warming
Secondary Health Care
Health care directed towards disease treatment in hospital and community via various (usually Western-style) medical practitioners
Tertiary Care
Health care that occurs in a teaching hospital attached to a university, with a side emphasis on health promotion
Twentieth-Century Disease
Hypersensitivity to toxic chemicals in the environment (also known as 'Total Allergy Syndrome' and 'Environmental Illness')
Psychosomatic
Illness and diseases cased by psychological, mental, or emotional conditions
Upstream Model
Interventions that occur prior to disease occurrence, intended to prevent illness
Downstream Model
Interventions to cure the illness that occur after disease has started
Infant Mortality Rates
Measurements of the number of deaths of infants (usually infants of less than on year) in a given year as a function of the total number in the cohort, usually presented as deaths per 1000 live births
Uncertainty
Not knowing what the outcome of a diagnosis will b
Neo-liberalism
Political ideology that focuses on the primacy of the market and free enterprise in economic development and on social and political values that give priority to individual freedom rather than group rights
Risk Society
Postmodern society characterized by ubiquitous risks (many of which are created in the process of manufacturing our supposed quality) ranging from the cars we drive tot he medicines we take and various risky but pleasurable behaviorus
Social Support
Practical help, sympathetic understanding, and/or integration into social life offered to an individual
Illness Candidate
Someone in remission from a life threatening condition
Patient-in-Waiting
Someone living with the statistically or genetically predicted expectation of disease
Survivor
Someone who has not succumbed to a deadly disease or accident and has been given a qualified or tentative "clean bill of health"
Female Circumcision
Surgical procedures (performed without anaesthetic by folk practitioners) such as circumcision, where the hood of the clitoris is cut; extension, where the clitoris and all or part of the labia minora are cut out; and infibulation, which includes cutting the clitoris, labia minora, and at least part of the labia major and suturing the two sides of the vulva, leaving only a minuscule opening
Secondary Gains
The "additional" benefits of feigning sickness
Stigma
The "othering" or blaming of a person or group as a result of a particular characteristic (such as a mental illness or ethnicity)
Cumulative Effects
The accumulation of advantage or disadvantage over a lifetime and how this affects the subsequent probability of health or illness as the person ages
Health in all Policies (HiAP)
The assertion that all social policies have consequences for the health of a population
Essentialized
The assumption made that there is an essential or basic biologically driven gender, race, sexuality, and so on (this notion ignores the powerful effects of the social on these categories)
Life Expectancy
The average age to which people born in a given year in a particular country or region of a country can expect to live
Sickness
The behaviours engaged in by the person who feels ill, such as staying in bed or going to the doctor
Absolute Homelessness
The condition of those who have no home and spend their nights either in homeless shelters or on the streets
Sex-Mortality Differential
The difference between male and female mortality rates expressed as a percentage, proportion, or fraction of the population
Global Ecosystem
The ecosphere, where environmental policies and actions in one region or country can affect aspects of the environment in other parts of the world
Primary Health Care
The essential and basic medical care that people and societies receive or should receive, including necessary drug provision, immunization, maternal and child care, disease control, local epidemiological research, and prevention efforts through improved education, sanitation, and nutrition
Illness
The experience of feeling not well
Prevalence
The extent to which a disease (diagnoses or deaths) occurs in a population at a particular time interval
Epidemiology
The field of study that focuses on patterns of disease and disease outbreak
Fundamental Cause
The first or fundamental cause of illness
Disease mongering
The idea that corporations such as pharmaceutical companies sometimes market a new disease after they have developed a new and relevant treatment
Doctrine of specific etiology
The idea that disease is a result of a specific pathogen or organ malfunction
Pharmeceuticalization
The increasing emphasis and reliance on drugs within the medical profession, and within society, to address issues of health and illness
Latency Effects
The long-term health impacts on individuals of early developmental characteristics (such as premature birth or being underweight or overweight at birth)
Precautionary Principle
The need for caution in regard to the introduction and acceptance of new technologies; "first, do no harm"
Illness Iceberg
The notion that (just as most of an iceberg is under water and unseen) much of illness, individually or within society as a whole, is undetected or not acknowledged
Birth Rate
The number of babies born in a given place over a given period of time (expressed as a function of total population)
Mortality Rate
The number of people who die in a given year as a function of the Toal population of a designated region, usually calculated as the number of deaths per 1000 people
Life Course Approach
The perspective on the social determinants of health that focus on the additives or cumulative effects of inequality or equity on the life chances and health of individuals
Social Capital
The power and well (economic, relational, emotional, and spiritual) gained by individuals as members of social networks
Independent Variable
The presumed causes of a change that must precede the changes observed in a study of human social behaviour
Racialization
The process whereby social distinctions are constructed by and about groups of people on the basis of skin colour and other perceived differences
Incidence
The rate of number of new cases of disease (either diagnoses or deaths) in a population in a given period of time
Social Cohesion
The relational 'glue' of interactions and shared activities that bind, integrate, and foster mutual interdependent of people into social life
Social Determinant of Health
The social conditions of inequality based on such factors as income, gender, age, education, housing, and neighbourhood that lead to differences in health outcomes
Remission Society
The social situation caused by the increase in people who are alive after a serious diagnosis, such as cancer, yet are continually on the lookout for the disease to return
Medicalization
The tendency for more and more of people lives to be encompassed by medical definitions of reality
Healthy Immigrant Effect
The tendency immigrants upon arrival in the receiving country and for some period of time afterwards to be healthier than non-immigrants of the same ages
Psychoneuroimmunology
The theory in modern biological science that focuses on the body's immune response to psychological states
Aspirational Health
The use of medicine to change one's identity and improve or enhance the self
Post-Structuralism
Theoretical stance emphasizing contingency and the shifting meanings and values of words, concepts, and identities, which rejects the validity of binary thinking and analysis (Eg. Male or female, well or ill, sane or insane)
Provisionally Accommodated
Those who live in a car, 'couch suffers' who live with their friends or family, and those in long-term institutions
Home Health-Care Work
Work in the home, most often done by women, that involves providing healthy conditions, nursing the sick, teaching about health, and mediating with those in the medical car system on behalf of family members with health problems
Occupational Stress
Work-related stress that can lead to a number of heath problems (caused by such factors; unreasonable deadlines, interpersonal conflicts, lack of feedback, unclear job requirements, and lack of influence)
Conflict Theory
a foundational sociological theory based on Marxian belief that the social classes are in fundamental conflict with one another (the social world is understood in terms of opposing/conflictual forces
"Environmental Illness"
a painful and sickening sensitivity to the environment (also called Twentieth Century Disease)
anti-racist theory
a theoretical approach, that views radicalization and racism as a cause of much social inequality
Biomedicalization
the intensification of medicalization over the past 20-30 years through such technoscientific processes as; computer programming, genomization, molecular biology, developments in transplant medicine, and new, expensive diagnostic technology
Dependent variable
the presumed effect of other, independent variables that must precede the dependent variables in a study of human behaviour
Discourses
ways of convincing and talking about issues, such as medicine, so that reality is defined in particular terms by the power of language
Kyoto Protocol
A 1997 agreement among most countries (using 1990 emission as a baseline) to cute greenhouse gas emissions in order to control climate change.
Sense of Coherence
A belief that the world makes sense and that the individual knows how to achieve desired goals and cope with life's vicissitudes because of the confidence that, in the long run, things will work out well
Sick Role
A concept from structural functionalism that holds that sickness is a social role characterized by two rights and two duties
Structural Functionalism
A foundational sociological theory that views the social world as a system of interlocking parts working together to fulfill functions geared tot he sustainability of the social order
Diarrheal Disease
A leading cause of infant death in the developing world; caused by polluted water, poor hygiene, and inadequate situation
Disease
A medical diagnosis pertaining to ill health
Minority Status
A numerical under-representation of an identifiably different group within a population
Political Economy Perspective
A perspective on the world development that considers the place of nations in respect to their economic and political condition, and that examines how national and international politics and economies feed of one another
Positivism
A philosophy of science that holds valid such values as objectivity, observation, replication, experimental design, and numerical analysis. It has often been used in concert with structural-functional theory
Racism
A process of evaluating and acting prejudicially and negatively towards people of a different social group and skin colour
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
A psychiatric term referring to anxiety, as well to psychological and physical suffering, that results from the experience of trauma
Social Readjustment Rating Scale
A scale that measures the amount of social change an individual has undergone in a given period of time (the results are said to predict the likelihood of subsequent illness)
Core Country, Periphery Country, Semi-Periphery Countries
A schema that differentiates nation-states on the basis of their stages of economic development and governance stability
Privatization
A shift from the public sector to the private sector in the provision of health services, often with the assumption that the individual rather than the state must pay for these services
Food Security
A situation, either chronic or acute, in which people do not have access to enough safe, nutritious, and culturally acceptable food