Social epidemiology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article or section needs to be wikified to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please help improve this article with relevant internal links. (January 2008) |
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (January 2008) |
Social epidemiology is defined as "The branch of epidemiology that studies the social distribution and social determinants of health,"[1] that is, "both specific features of, and pathways by which, societal conditions affect health."[2]
Social epidemiology may focus on individual-level measures, or on emergent social properties that have no correlate at the individual level; simultaneous analysis at both levels may be warranted.[3] Use of such multilevel models (also known as hierarchical and mixed effects models) has grown in recent years, but suffers from theoretical and practical concerns.[4]
Social epidemiology overlaps with fields in the social sciences, most notably medical sociology and medical geography. However, these latter fields often use health and disease in order to explain specifically social phenomenon (such as the growth of lay health advocacy movements), [5] while social epidemiologists generally use social concepts in order to explain patterns of health in the population.
- A partial list of social epidemiologists includes
- John Lynch, McGill University: social class, material conditions, and health
- Richard Wilkinson (public health), University of Nottingham: income inequality and health
- Michael Marmot, University College London: social class and health
- Nancy Krieger, Harvard University: racism, social class, geographic disparities and health
- Jay Kaufman, UNC-Chapel Hill: social epidemiology methods, race and health
- Ana Diez-Roux, University of Michigan: neighborhoods and health, multilevel methods
- Michael Oakes, University of Minnesota: neighborhoods and health, social epidemiology methods
- Nancy Adler, UC-San Francisco: psychosocial mediators
- George Kaplan, University of Michigan
- Leonard Syme, UC Berkeley
- Sherman James, Duke University
- Lisa Berkman, Harvard University
- Ichiro Kawachi, Harvard University
- George Davey Smith, University of Bristol (UK)
- Richard Cooper, Loyola University Chicago
- Juan Merlo, Lund University, Sweden
- Martin Lindström, Lund University, Sweden
- Maria Rosvall, Lund University, Sweden
[edit] References
- ^ Berkman LA, Kawachi I. A Historical Framework for Social Epidemiology. In: Berkman L, Kawachi I, eds. Social epidemiology. New York: Oxford University Press; 2000:3-12.
- ^ Krieger N. A glossary for social epidemiology. J Epidemiol Community Health. Oct 2001;55(10):693-700.
- ^ Diez-Roux A. Bringing context back into epidemiology: variables and fallacies in multilevel analysis. Am J Public Health. 1998;88:216-222.
- ^ Oakes JM. The (mis)estimation of neighborhood effects: causal inference for a practicable social epidemiology. Soc Sci Med. May 2004;58(10):1929-1952.
- ^ Brown P. Naming and framing: the social construction of diagnosis and illness. J Health Soc Behav. 1995;Spec No:34-52.