By tracking the distribution of disease and pinpointing relevant risk factors, social epidemiology reveals how social problems are intrinsically linked to the health of populations. The practice also takes into account the psychosocial, biological, and medical determinants of disease and health, encouraging a rich and multidisciplinary approach to analyzing and solving complex contemporary social issues. This book provides a clear and comprehensive set of tools for practice. Julie Cwikel begins with an overview of the historical roots of public health and social medicine and shows how they formed the theoretical basis for current social epidemiological methods. Cwikel then explains the theoretical and programmatic tools social epidemiologists use in their research, program planning, and evaluation. In conclusion, Cwikel demonstrates how the SOCEPID model can be applied to a range of topics, including chronic illness, obesity, violence prevention, occupational health, sexually transmitted diseases (especially HIV), environmental hazards, and addressing the needs of vulnerable populations such as immigrants and trafficked women. With compelling authority, Cwikel shows readers how the exciting and growing field of social epidemiology is both practical and activist, drawing on cutting-edge empirical findings to conduct policymaking research and promote health at both the personal and population levels.
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Tracking the distribution of disease and pinpointing relevant risk factors, this book reveals how social problems are intrinsically linked to the health of populations. This book shows how the growing field of social epidemiology is both practical and activist. It draws on empirical findings to conduct policymaking research.
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"A welcome addition to every practitioner and researcher's library, especially physicians" Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine
Julie Cwikel's book is timely and needed in an era when epidemiology is regarded as a discipline mainly driven by formulae devoid of values. Her book captures and emphasizes epidemiology's central historical role in defining root and proximate causes and in measuring effects in order to improve population health. This is a welcome and inspiring book. -- Derek Yach, professor and head, Division of Global Health, Yale School of Public Health, and director of the Rockefeller Foundation's program on global health This book presents an excellent delineation of a health endeavor that is deservedly coming into greater prominence: social epidemiology. First-rate scholarship shows in Julie Cwikel's accounts of social epidemiology's origins in classical epidemiology; its methods in the field; and several major applications, as well as in the extensive references. Cwikel then goes beyond the concept that social epidemiology is concerned only with the social factors in health and disease by including strategies for public health activism. -- Lester Breslow, Dean Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles, School of Public Health
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780231100489
Publisert
2006-12-12
Utgiver
Vendor
Columbia University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Julie Cwikel is professor in the Spitzer Department of Social Work and founder and director of the Center for Women's Health Studies and Promotion at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel. Julie Cwikel, MSW, PhD is Associate Professor in the Department of Social Work at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Shiva, Israel, where she also founded and co-leads The Center for Women's Health Studies and Promotion. Cwikel is trained in both social work and public health and received her MSW and PhD from the University of Michigan.