Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
| View Larger Image | Uncertain Suffering: Racial Health Care Disparities and Sickle Cell Disease (George Gund Foundation Imprint in African American Studies) | Paperbackby Carolyn Rouse (Author)
| List Price: | $21.95 | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Paperback | | Publisher: | University of California Press | | Edition: | 1st Edition | | Page Count: | 328 Pages | | Publication Date: | August 03, 2009 | | Sales Rank: | 582,296nd |
|
FEATURES | - ISBN13: 9780520259126
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
|
EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description On average, black Americans are sicker and die earlier than white Americans. Uncertain Suffering provides a richly nuanced examination of what this fact means for health care in the United States through the lens of sickle cell anemia, a disease that primarily affects blacks. In a wide ranging analysis that moves from individual patient cases to the compassionate yet distanced professionalism of health care specialists to the level of national policy, Carolyn Moxley Rouse uncovers the cultural assumptions that shape the quality and delivery of care for sickle cell patients. She reveals a clinical world fraught with uncertainties over how to treat black patients given resource limitations and ambivalence. Her book is a compelling look at the ways in which the politics of racism, attitudes toward pain and suffering, and the reliance on charity for healthcare services for the underclass can create disparities in the U.S. Instead of burdening hospitals and clinics with the task of ameliorating these disparities, Rouse argues that resources should be redirected to community-based health programs that reduce daily forms of physical and mental suffering. |
SIMILAR PRODUCTS |

| Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, Revised Edition by James H. Jones (Author), Jones (Author)
From 1932 to 1972, the United States Public Health Service conducted a non-therapeutic experiment involving over 400 black male sharecroppers infected with syphilis. The Tuskegee Study had nothing to do with treatment. It purpose was to trace the spontaneous evolution of the disease in order to learn how syphilis affected black subjects. The men were not told they had syphilis; they were not warned about what the disease might do to them; and, with the exception of a smattering of medication...
| 
| Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences (Inside Technology) by Geoffrey C. Bowker (Author), Susan Leigh Star (Author)
What do a seventeenth-century mortality table (whose causes of death include "fainted in a bath," "frighted," and "itch"); the identification of South Africans during apartheid as European, Asian, colored, or black; and the separation of machine- from hand-washables have in common? All are examples of classification -- the scaffolding of information infrastructures. In Sorting Things Out, Geoffrey Bowker and Susan Leigh Star explore the role of categories and standards in shaping the modern...
| 
| Racial Hygiene: Medicine Under the Nazis by Robert Proctor (Author)
Scholars exploring the history of science under the Nazis have generally concentrated on the Nazi destruction of science or the corruption of intellectual and liberal values. Racial Hygiene focuses on how scientists themselves participated in the construction of Nazi racial policy. Robert Proctor demonstrates that the common picture of a passive scientific community coerced into cooperation with the Nazis fails to grasp the reality of what actually happened--namely, that many of the...
| 
| Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death (Public Anthropology) by Margaret Lock (Author)
Tales about organ transplants appear in mythology and folk stories, and surface in documents from medieval times, but only during the past twenty years has medical knowledge and technology been sufficiently advanced for surgeons to perform thousands of transplants each year. In the majority of cases individuals diagnosed as "brain dead" are the source of the organs without which transplants could not take place. In this compelling and provocative examination, Margaret Lock traces...
| 
| Righteous Dopefiend (California Series in Public Anthropology) by Philippe Bourgois (Author), Jeffrey Schonberg (Author)
This powerful study immerses the reader in the world of homelessness and drug addiction in the contemporary United States. For over a decade Philippe Bourgois and Jeff Schonberg followed a social network of two dozen heroin injectors and crack smokers on the streets of San Francisco, accompanying them as they scrambled to generate income through burglary, panhandling, recycling, and day labor. Righteous Dopefiend interweaves stunning black-and-white photographs with vivid dialogue, detailed...
|
|
|
|