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Sociology of Mental Health and Illness 6e 6th edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 330 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x170x18 mm, kaal: 583 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Jan-2021
  • Kirjastus: Open University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0335248489
  • ISBN-13: 9780335248483
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 330 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x170x18 mm, kaal: 583 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Jan-2021
  • Kirjastus: Open University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0335248489
  • ISBN-13: 9780335248483
Teised raamatud teemal:
How do we understand mental health problems in their social context?

A former BMA Medical Book of the Year award winner, this book provides a sociological analysis of major areas of mental health and illness. The book considers contemporary and historical aspects of sociology, social psychiatry, policy and therapeutic law to help students develop an in-depth and critical approach to this complex subject. New developments for the sixth edition include:

Brand new chapter on aging and older people

Updated material on social class, ethnicity, user involvement, young people and adolescence

New coverage on prisons legalism and the rise of digital mental health management and delivery

A classic in its field, this well-established textbook offers a rich, contemporary and well-crafted overview of mental health and illness unrivalled by competitors and is essential reading for students and professionals studying a range of medical sociology and health-related courses. It is also highly suitable for trainee mental health workers in the fields of social work, nursing, clinical psychology and psychiatry.







This classic text book has for many years provided the definitive sociological lens with which to understand the range of conceptual approaches to understanding mental illness in the historical journey from madness to emotional health and the complex interdisciplinary challenges of providing appropriate care or treatment to human distress and suffering. This updated edition continues to provide illuminating insights and clarifications not only for students but for academic researchers and scholars at all levels.

Gillian Bendelow, Professor in Sociology of Health and Medicine, School of Applied Social Science, University of Brighton

A Sociology of Mental Health and Illness is a sociological classic for three decades now it has been essential reading for all sociologists (and other social scientists) wishing to learn more about mental (ill-)health and society, be they students or professional teachers and researchers. It has also long been a beacon, and will continue to guide, mental health practitioners keen to better understand and engage with the social dimensions of their work. A Sociology of Mental Health and Illness is an incomparable resource.  

Professor Martyn Pickersgill, University of Edinburgh, UK

The relationship between sociology and mental health has been well documented over the years. Social factors such as poverty, social stress, socioeconomic disadvantages, inequality, social exclusion have been implicated for increased rates of mental health problems. Unfortunately, psychiatry has not engaged sufficiently with sociology. A Sociology of Mental Health and Illness has covered this disparity. The sixth edition is a most welcome addition updating social trends and new sociological material relevant to mental health, more emphasis on service users participation and the emerged evidence base. It is a classic that should be an essential reading for all mental health professionals.

Nick Bouras, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, Kings College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience 







Anne Rogers is Professor of Medical Sociology & Health Systems Implementation at the University of Southampton.

David Pilgrim is Visiting Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Southampton.
Preface to the sixth edition xi
1 Perspectives on mental health and illness
1(22)
Clinical perspectives
1(8)
Psychiatry
1(2)
Psychoanalysis
3(1)
Psychology
4(1)
The statistical notion
5(1)
The ideal notion
5(1)
The presence of specific behaviours
6(1)
Distorted cognitions
7(2)
Perspectives within sociology
9(6)
Social causation
10(1)
Interpretive sociology
11(3)
Social constructivism
14(1)
Sociological and clinical perspectives compared
15(6)
Discussion
21(2)
2 People with mental health problems and users of services
23(26)
The diffuse concept of service use
24(1)
Relatives or `significant others'
25(2)
Users as patients
27(2)
Privileging professional over user views in research
27(1)
The assumption that psychiatric patients are continually irrational
28(1)
Patients and relatives are assumed to share the same perspective
28(1)
Framing patient views to suit those of professionals
29(1)
Coopting users and user research?
29(3)
Users as consumers
32(3)
Users as survivors and activists
35(1)
The phenomenology of surviving the psychiatric system
35(1)
Survivors as a new social movement
36(5)
Users as providers
41(4)
The tension between advising, providing and campaigning
45(1)
Discussion
46(3)
3 Social stratification and mental health
49(20)
The relationship between social class and diagnosed mental illness
50(7)
Social capital and mental health
57(3)
The relationship between poverty and mental health
60(3)
Labour market disadvantage
61(1)
Housing
62(1)
Social class and mental health professionalism
63(1)
Lay views about mental health and social class
64(1)
Discussion
65(4)
4 Sex, gender and mental health
69(20)
The over-representation of women in psychiatric diagnosis
69(2)
Does society cause excessive female mental illness?
71(1)
Is female over-representation a measurement artefact?
72(4)
Sex differences in help-seeking behaviour
74(2)
Are women labelled as mentally ill more often than men?
76(6)
Women, minor tranquillizers and antidepressants
79(1)
Men, distress, dangerousness and mental health services
80(2)
Gender and sexuality
82(4)
The psychiatric response to gender non-conformity
85(1)
Discussion
86(3)
5 Race, ethnicity and mental health
89(20)
Theoretical presuppositions about race
90(1)
Race and health
91(1)
The epidemiology of mental health, race and ethnicity
92(4)
Methodological cautions about findings
96(4)
Type of service contact
97(2)
Disproportionate coercion
99(1)
Black people's conduct and attributions of madness: some summary points
100(2)
Labelling reflects actual incidence
100(1)
Misdiagnosis
100(1)
Racialized psychiatric constructs
101(1)
South Asian women and the somatization thesis
102(2)
Migration and mental health
104(2)
Discussion
106(3)
6 Birth, childhood and adolescence
109(18)
The life course and mental health
109(1)
Birth: mental health challenges at the start of life
110(1)
Childhood and mental health
111(5)
Adversity in childhood
116(2)
Childhood sexual abuse
118(3)
Adolescence, social media and mental health
121(2)
The challenges of entering adulthood
123(2)
Discussion
125(1)
Conclusion
126(1)
7 Ageing and older people
127(13)
The `Third Age': retirement and mental well-being
128(2)
Help-seeking and service provision for older people
130(1)
The `Fourth Age': dementia, depression and suicide
131(6)
Dementia
132(4)
Depression and suicide
136(1)
A `Fifth Age'?: making a hundred
137(1)
Discussion
138(2)
8 The organization of mental health work
140(18)
The rise of the asylum and its legacy
141(5)
The `pharmacological revolution' and its critics
146(2)
The role of economic determinism
148(1)
Changes in the organization and place of provision
148(8)
Digital interventions and mutual support
154(2)
Discussion
156(2)
9 Mental health work and its professions
158(18)
Sociological perspectives on mental health work
159(9)
The neo-Durkheimian framework
159(1)
The neo-Weberian framework
160(3)
The neo-Marxian framework
163(1)
Sociological eclecticism
164(4)
Relevant sociological contributions about deviance and knowledge
168(3)
Legal governance and inter-professional relationships
171(1)
Discussion
172(2)
Conclusion
174(2)
10 The treatment of people with mental health problems
176(27)
A brief social history of psychiatric treatment
177(4)
Can "personality disorder' be treated?
178(3)
A critical appraisal of psychiatric treatment
181(10)
Why have physical treatments predominated?
182(1)
Antipsychotics
183(2)
Antidepressants
185(2)
`Big Pharma': its role and critics
187(1)
Psychological therapies
188(2)
Disputes about ECT
190(1)
Alternative and complementary therapies
191(4)
Precarious treatment authority
194(1)
The moral sense of treatment'
195(4)
Moral ambiguities: informed consent and other matters for practitioners
196(3)
The social distribution of treatment
199(1)
Discussion
200(3)
11 Mental health legislation
203(17)
Legal versus medical control of madness
204(6)
Britain as a case study
204(2)
Socio-legal aspects of compulsion
206(4)
The globalization of compulsion and human rights legislation
210(1)
Professional involvement in legalism
211(2)
Violence and mental disorder
213(5)
Impact on patients of their risky image
216(2)
Discussion
218(2)
12 Prisons and the policing of mental disorder
220(12)
Secure mental health services
220(4)
Patients as prisoners or prisoners as patients?
222(2)
Mental health care in prisons
224(4)
Medication, therapeutic communities and other approaches
226(2)
Police officers as street-level bureaucrats
228(2)
Discussion
230(2)
13 Stigma and recoverg
232(20)
Lay views of psychological difference
232(2)
Stereotyping and stigma
234(5)
The meta-rule of intelligibility and social accountability
236(2)
Suicide and contagious stigma
238(1)
The `backbone of stigma'
239(3)
Competence and credibility
240(2)
Labelling theory and its modification
242(2)
The role of the mass media
243(1)
Social exclusion
244(4)
Do professionals perpetuate or ameliorate stigma?
247(1)
Recovery
248(2)
Discussion
250(2)
14 Preventing mental disorder and promoting mental health
252(15)
Prevention and promotion
253(4)
Types of prevention
254(3)
Desegregation and considerations of place and mental health
257(1)
Urban life as a psycho-toxic space?
257(1)
Well-being and happiness
258(2)
The interaction of physical and mental health
260(2)
Health, illness and societal norms
262(3)
Discussion
265(2)
References 267(39)
Index 306